Showing posts with label The Perfect Family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Perfect Family. Show all posts

Sunday, August 10, 2014

How To Start A Family History Book

 
For the past year or so, I have been researching my family history. It has now become a hobby that I enjoy with each new discovery. Here's 7 ways for you to start your own family history book.
 
ONE
Start by writing down what you already know. A simple family tree diagram with your parents, grandparents and great grandparents names. Next time you visit, or call a family member slightly older than you, ask what they may know about your family history and write notes.
 
TWO
Keep all your notes in a binder, or a simple manila file folder so they are all in one place. Print out blank diagrams, free from this site to help you organize the research you have so far.
 
THREE
Start scanning in any old photos your family members may have. Sometimes you may have to dig in old draws or attic spaces, but pictures do help evoke memories. Keep a backup on a thumb drive, or an external hard drive.
 
On a personal note, don't take scanning in photos for granted. I am grateful I borrowed all my dad's photo albums and scanned in all my childhood memories before he passed away. His girlfriend inherited the house, and had no interest in returning 'family items' back to our family. Best thing I ever did, otherwise I would have lost 500 pictures of my childhood.
 
My dad and his Uncle Winifred
 
FOUR
Find an online site like family search, or ancestry to help you get further in your research. Personally, I like ancestry even if I do have to pay. Start putting in what you already know, and if you can go as far back as 1911 then you should be able to find your family in that census. With that information you should be able to work backwards until you see hints appear from other users who are distantly related to you.
 
Until you do deep research, such as a birth records, baptism records, a census every 10 years and death records, don't take all the details others provide as facts.
 
Some examples I've done include this, this, this and this. Now these are all from my maternal, maternal, maternal bloodline. I have done detailed research to the early Victorian period, watched videos from that time and even pinned wedding dresses my ancestors would have worn from the same time period. Doing this brings your ancestors alive.
 
FIVE
When you find out locations your ancestors were born, lived in or died at, google map it so you can get a worldly perspective of your families migration. Personally, I have found a lot of images of the churches, and even the homes some of my past ancestors lived in.
 
Parish of Bedworth
 
SIX
If you need help with your research try finding groups online. I am apart of a genealogy group on Facebook that helps me decipher everything from censuses to headstones. Also, most people in the group have a similar interest and similarly share what they've successfully found.
 
SEVEN
Record your findings to create your own family history book. I blog my findings while there fresh in my mind and it helps me to put everything into chronological order, otherwise I'd be muddled up with names and dates. Another suggestion I heard is to make a video, so you can share your findings with family members.
 
I might someday, but for now I've been watercoloring my own story in a keepsake book, so that will keep me pre-occupied for the next year or so.
 
--------------------------------------------
 
Best of luck on your research! Remember, even if someone in your family has done a lot for you, find ways to expand, and learn more from your ancestors.
 
You can find extra resources I've pinned here, and see my family photos here.
 
Any other tips or advice? Please do share...

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Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Be an Encourager

Did you watch the Duggars last night on TLC? I really enjoy watching their show and seeing how their family interacts. They speak kindly of one another, and are encouragers.
President Uchtdorf.
We have a culture obsessed with fame and fortune. The price that some stars pay for that is something they will never be able to get a refund for. That's why some stars, like the Duggars stand the test of time, because people admire or want to be them. That's healthier than exposing yourself for national attention in a way that can never be recovered.
 
Perhaps your family, or somebody's you know has a critical spirit. Don't feed into it, instead just follow the rule...if you haven't got anything good to say, don't say it at all. Be an encourager, you'll get more respect and create meaningful relationships that matter instead of weary relationships.
The very purpose of spirituality...
Functional families are so important in our lives and to our society. Unfortunately many aren't blessed with a functional family. It's a pattern that can repeat itself if it isn't interrupted, so it's important that we all have a reflective time in our life, to slow down and focus on what matters the most.
you can preach a better sermon
Bless you family and children with heartfelt encouragement, and emulate those who manage to do so. Maybe not all reality TV shows are channel switchers!

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Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Happy Family Qualities

In my opinion, the best way to improve our society is to improve our families. If we come from functional families we oftentimes are better prepared members of society. I did a post some time ago called Improving Our Families, Helps Improve Society
 
We can't choose the families we come from, and unfortunately there are a lot of families where the damage is irreversible, so we must not judge those who are trying to make their lives better. To understand what it's like to come from a dysfunctional family read my post You Are Not A Sad Story and Power Imbalances In Marriage.
 
It starts is with YOU.
 
You can't change your past, but you can learn to accept and understand it. You can set the tone for your family life, your friendships or create a happier family with your future partner and family. To do that we need to learn about the qualities that make a happy family.       
 
Elvira G. Aletta from Psych Central had this list:
 
R-E-S-P-E-C-T Respect is the Holy Grail of functional families. All people in the family, brothers to sisters, mothers to fathers, parents to kids must be respectful as consistently as possible. Being considerate of each other is the tie that binds, even more than love. I think too much emphasis is put on love in general. I’ve heard of many atrocities done within families in the name of love but never in the name of respect. Just about all the things on the list come out of respect first.
 
An Emotionally Safe Environment.
All members of the family can state their opinions, thoughts, wants, dreams, desires and feelings without fear of being slammed, shamed, belittled or dismissed.
 
A Resilient Foundation.
When relationships between and amongst people in a family are healthy they can withstand stress, even trauma, and, if not bounce back, at least recover. Resilience starts with encouraging sound health, eating and sleeping well, and physical activity.
 
Privacy.
Privacy of space, of body and of thought. Knock and ask permission to enter before going through a closed door. All family members are sensitive regarding personal space and aren’t insulted if someone needs a wide berth.
 
Accountability.
Being accountable is not the same as planting a homing device on your kid or abusing the cell phone to track her whereabouts 24/7. That’s not much better than stalking. No, being accountable is (again with the respect thing) respectfully and reasonably informing people in the family where you are and what you are doing so they can grow trust and not worry.
 
An Apology.
It’s sad when people hold out for an apology on a point of pride, never acknowledging their part in a dispute. How many times have you heard of rifts in families that last for years because someone feels they are ‘owed an apology’?
 
A functional family will have conflict. It’s very cool when we can have an argument and get to the other side of it still friendly and satisfied with the outcome. But let’s face it, that’s not always the case. Sometimes we say things that we regret. If we can feel and show remorse for our part, quickly apologize, ask for and receive forgiveness, no harm is done. You may even become closer for it.
 
Allow Reasonable Expression of Emotions.
When I was growing up I wasn’t allowed to be angry at my parents and my father would walk out on me if I cried. I was determined to not do that to my kids. It hasn’t been easy. The main thing for me was to teach them to state their anger in a managed manner and to teach myself not to fly off the handle when they did. I had to learn that their telling me they weren’t happy with something I did or said could be done with respect. And, very importantly, vice versa.
 
Gentle on Teasing and Sarcasm.
Teasing can be OK as long as the teased is in on the joke. Same with sarcasm. A functional family won’t use either as a poorly masked put down.
 
Allows People to Change and Grow.
It used to be people in the family were labeled the smart one or the pretty one, the funny one or the shy one. While that’s not done so overtly any more, labeling is still something to watch. A functional family lets people define themselves. Individual differences are appreciated even celebrated. It also lets the kids become independent when it’s appropriate and come back to the safety of the family when they need nurturing.
 
The adults in the family need to be allowed to grow as well. A mother may want to get a graduate degree, or a father may decide to retire early and start something new. These changes merit discussion on how they will effect everyone in the family, adjustment, perhaps negotiation, but again, if done with respect every one can be satisfied.
 
Parents Work as a Co-Parenting Team.
I strongly believe that a functional family is one where the adults are at the center of the family, in charge and pulling together in the same direction. In a functional family parents, divorced or married, take responsibility. Kids need the assurance that a firm hand (not too tight and not too loose) is at the tiller, even if they may not thank you for it.
 
Courtesy at Home First.
An ounce of a well-placed ‘please’ or ‘thank you’, ‘you’re welcome’ or ‘I’m sorry’ is worth a pound of explanations, defensive arguments and misunderstandings.
 
Encourages Siblings to Work Together.
Brothers and sisters have a unique relationship and it’s a dead shame when it is not nourished. Functional parents encourage siblings to play, work and problem solve together, enhancing inter-sib communication, instead of interfering with their arguments. That way siblings feel empowered and their bond is closer when they find a solution by themselves.
 
Provides Clear Boundaries.
We aren’t each other’s friends. A parent is a parent no matter how friendly they may be. Our children are not extensions of ourselves, they are individuals. Do not ‘friend’ them on Facebook unless you talk about it first and they say it’s OK and they mean it.
 
Has Each Others’ Backs.
Part of resilience – being supportive to each other no matter what, will allow your kid to call you when he thinks he’s in trouble, like needing a ride home from a party that’s gotten too wild.
 
Get Each Other’s Sense of Humor.
Functional families laugh a lot. They have ‘inside’ jokes and favorite stories, anecdotes of memories shared that delight and re-enforces a healthy bond.
 
Eat Meals Together.
So hard to do in today’s society but research does show that communication within a family is enhanced if we take more meals together, even if it’s in front of the TV.
 
Follow The Golden Rule.
It’s golden for a reason. “Treat each other as we wish to be treated in turn.” It was true way back when and it’s still true now.

Saturday, February 15, 2014

Families That Stay Together, Have Family Dinner Together

One way to build a happy family is to put faith and food around your dinner table.
 
"When Jesus sat at the Passover table with his disciples, he instituted the Lord’s supper and said, “I appoint unto you a kingdom that you may eat and drink at my table in my kingdom” (Luke 22:29-30).
 
 
 
I found this article by Connie W. Adams, and it describes how the table of the Lord, can keep a family together;

The Family Table
 
Historically the family table has not only met the physical needs of its members, but has done much to nourish their emotional needs as well. In godly homes, the table has been the place where God is thanked for daily provisions. It has been a place for shared moments for laughter, for concern, for instruction and training and has done much to establish memories which contribute to lasting bonds within a family. “Dinner is ready” has been a welcomed sound to many for a long time.
 
The demands of modern life in our culture have been such that the value (or even presence) of a family table has been diminished. In many a household, families do not eat together. It is difficult to set a time when everyone is present at the same time. Work schedules, school functions, part-time jobs, the desire to eat in a separate room to see something on television, or the notion that “I’ll eat when I am hungry” has interfered with the family table. Many in the present time regard anything which smacks of a routine or schedule as sinister. Forgotten is the fact that family meals are not just to satisfy hunger. They are social events, a time for families to share the same food at the same time, to talk of the events of the day, learn about what happened at work, at school. It is an ideal time for children to listen to their parents and learn something of their heritage. It is a time which ought to challenge every parent to make the occasion special.
 
Ah, but therein lies some of the problem. A family dinner demands, well, a dinner. And who shall prepare it? Whose turn is it to make dinner? The absence of a full-time homemaker in the modem home does create special problems about family meals. It is hard to set a time when everyone can be together. The lack of parental control of children whose whims and boorish manners set the agenda in too many households is a further hindrance to any kind of family dinner time. Parents who allow their children to grow up with picky eating habits deserve whatever grief and embarrassment that may cause them.
 
The Family Table in a Yard Sale
 
I always knew the family dinner table was special but I had it brought home to me in poignant manner which I will never forget. After my mother died in 1995, we decided to have a yard sale to dispose of things we did not intend to keep in the family. It fell the lot of Bobby and me to conduct the yard sale with the help of good folks from the congregation where my mother had attended at Rivermont (Chester), Virginia. We had two days of it and it went fairly well. I have never liked yard sales and some-how the excitement which seems to grip some about them has eluded me. It was distasteful to watch strangers rummage through things which my parents had handled so many times in the course of a lifetime. But I did all right with that until late the second day.
 
We had all decided to sell the old kitchen table and six chairs (we used extra chairs at numerous times). The table was topped with a hard, vinyl-like surface with chrome legs and strips around the top. The chairs had been patched a number of times but were still sturdy and serviceable. Late that day, an older couple came and bought the table and chairs. As they loaded these on a pickup truck, I watched in silence as they hauled it up the hill. And then I had to go in the house for awhile to collect my thoughts and emotions. Through my tears I reflected on a flood of memories all of which had that table right in the middle of them.
 
At that table we learned respect for each other and especially our elders. We had our turns to say what we wanted to say, but we did not interrupt when the “grown folks” were talking. At the family supper table I learned so much about the men with whom my father worked that I felt like I knew them all. From my father and mother we learned much about our heritage. Our grandmother added much spice with her stories of times past. Somehow we felt attached to the people and places of which they spoke so fondly. At that table I learned not to aggravate my brother, at least not in reach of my fathers hand! The only time I remember that he ever physically struck me was over just such an occasion. It startled everyone and scared the living daylights out of me! My father’s method of correction was usually to talk to us in such a way that we felt ashamed of ourselves. His sudden action was totally unexpected, uncharacteristic, and never forgotten.
 
It was at that table, when I was eleven years old, that my parents explained to us why we were leaving the Christian Church, in which we had many relatives and long-time friends. Serious Bible talk made lasting impressions. Somehow, at that table, we were all one family. There we could mourn our losses, savor our victories, commiserate with one another, pass down folk-lore from one generation to another. There at that table the pressures and stresses of the day, of work, school and play, dissolved as we sat down together. The food was not always gourmet, but it was abundant (even in hard times) and lovingly prepared. We did not have the finest china and silverware, but we sure did set the table with love.
 
And now, that table with all its memories had just been hauled away by strangers who could never fully know what memories had been made around it. It was just an inanimate object. Had I known what emotions the selling of it would evoke, it would never have been sold. That inanimate object was the centerpiece of events which had much to do with who we all became and what we have tried to do with our lives.
 
So, amid the rush and press of life as it is lived today, don’t forget the importance of the family dinner table. Take time to eat together, then sit back for a little while and savor the moment and talk to each other. Neglecting the family dinner table will have the same harmful effect on your physical family as neglecting the “table of the Lord” will have on your spiritual family. Do you think it was just an accident that the Lord chose a table as the place to re-member his suffering and to renew our hope for the world to come?
 
- Source
 
 Videos
 
 
 
 
 

Family Benefits

Family dinners create a sense of unity and identity, allowing for important traditions and celebrations that make children and adults feel cherished. These meals offer an opportunity to pass along important values and attitudes as well as unique aspects of your family heritage. Shared dinners also provide for regular communication and maintenance of a strong connection. Regular group dinners reinforce the essential parent-child bond. For younger children, group meals teach important conversational tactics, such as patience, listening and respect.

Benefits For Kids

Family dinners allow time for parents to find out about their children's lives and address potential problems. Researchers at North Dakota State University found that the kind of parental monitoring that happens at family mealtime is essential to a child's growth and well-being. Regular meals with loved ones also provide structure and stability in kids' lives, giving them security and setting the groundwork for healthy living in the future. Consistent family meals have been linked to decreased delinquency and substance abuse and better academic performance in children. Shared mealtimes have also been associated with greater levels of personal and social well-being. Family meals are linked to a decreased risk of eating disorders for adolescents, according to the "Journal of Adolescent Health."

Health

Sharing mealtime contributes to the health of the family as a whole. These dinners are a prime time to teach and talk about good eating habits. Parents can describe the nutritive values of foods on the table and explain why well-rounded meals are important. Parents can also monitor children's eating habits to make sure they're meeting nutritional needs for maximum health; children can learn the importance of portion sizes and of understanding when they're full. Regular family dinners have been linked to lower rates of childhood obesity, notes Sean Brotherson, an Extension Family Science specialist and associate professor in the Department of Child Development and Family Science at North Dakota State University.
 

Monday, June 3, 2013

Why Storytelling Is Important In A Family

Whether you are from a large family, or small doesn't matter. What matters is the memories you create, the stories you tell, and the legacy you leave behind.
 
Kit
Artist Unknown
 
I'm an avid reader of the dated Marriage and Families Magazine. I'm not Mormon, but I appreciate how important family is to them, and I also like their FHE (Family Home Evening) ideas.
 
This was a well written piece titled:
 
Forging Family Bonds through Storytelling
 
by David C. Dollahite, Ph.D.
 
Storytelling is a very important and a very neglected part of family life. Storytelling is a vital part of family life that we should be more actively involved with, but we tend to be overwhelmed with other, more passive, forms of entertainment, such as television, the Internet, video games, and radio. There are many ways to weave storytelling in your own family, especially as parents tell stories to children and older children tell stories to younger children.
 
The Old Testament speaks of “Elijah the prophet,” and Malachi writes that “he shall turn the heart of the fathers to the children, and the heart of the children to their fathers” (Malachi 4:5-6). There are, no doubt, many layers of meaning to this scripture, but I believe it says, in part, something profoundly important about turning the hearts of family members to one another–about the importance of children knowing their fathers, mothers, grandfathers, grandmothers, and as many other generations as they can know.
 
I have both thought about and studied what causes the hearts within a family to turn toward each other, and I’ve come to the conclusion that one of the most powerful forces is the telling of stories within our families. And I believe that developing a tradition of storytelling as an intentional part of a family’s daily, weekly, and monthly family activities will help touch and turn parents’ hearts to their children and the children’s hearts toward the parents.
 

What is family storytelling?

Family storytelling is as simple as family members telling stories to one another. There are many narratives from myths, tall tales, or other literature. Most people know and tell these existing stories, or they may read them in books. Sharing these stories is fine, but it is also beneficial to tell your children stories that mean something to you personally. Children love to hear their parents tell stories about themselves, especially about when they were young since this helps children feel closer to their bigger, older parent.
 
Family storytelling also grows out of the growing worldwide interest in genealogy and family history. Some people do not realize that an important part of genealogy is sharing and preserving the memories of family members who are living, as well as the histories of our ancestors. In every extended family, there seems to be at least one person who is concerned with genealogical work, while the rest of the family members usually go about doing their own thing. We need, instead, to have each living family member share their stories with other living family members. That is one of the keys to ensuring that a family isn’t just a bunch of people living in the same house, sharing the same smelling food, and having conversations mainly about mundane things. If you keep a personal history already, then you have a wealth of information that you can impart to your children.
 
There is an old Hasidic Jewish saying that states, “Give people a fact, and you enlighten their minds; tell them a story, and you touch their souls.” To have an enlightened mind is a good thing, but it is also good to have an enlightened soul. “Turning hearts” through storytelling creates a sense of oneness and connection between family members and generations that is quite different than parents and children who simply feel they are related by blood and the fact that they live under the same roof. Instead, they become connected by a love that grows out of knowing and understanding each other and feeling committed to each other.
 

Why is storytelling important?

Most people feel quite close to their mothers. On the other hand, many people have a bit of ambivalence toward their fathers and may not feel as close to them. This maybe because the father is away a lot or he works long hours. It may also be that he just doesn’t share much of himself, because many men do not verbalize their feelings or connect emotionally to their kids as much as their kids would like them to. When I ask students to share a story showing the connection they feel with their mothers, it is sometimes difficult for them to identify a particular experience because the connection is often ongoing and seamless. When I ask students to share the same kind of story about their fathers, most can identify a story about a time when they felt especially connected to their fathers. Often, the story centers around an illness or accident the student or their father has had.
 
When I was teaching at the University of North Carolina, I asked students to tell me a story of when they felt close to their fathers. A young woman in my class named Megan remembered that experience as a time when her father went the extra mile and sacrificed and in some ways put his life at risk to do something he knew was important to her.
 
Each year for her birthday, Megan’s father came to her grammar school for lunch. He would bring Megan and her friends ice cream sandwiches, and they would put candles in them and then sing “Happy Birthday.” He did this in grades 1 through 5 and this became a very important tradition for Megan. When Megan was in the sixth grade, she was especially looking forward to her father coming, assuming it would be the last time he did this. Just a couple of days before her birthday, Megan came home from school and found a note on the refrigerator. It was from her mother, who explained that her father had had another heart attack, that he was going to be okay, but that he was going to have to be in the hospital for several days. Megan, of course, was grateful her father was alive, but she also realized he wouldn’t be there for her birthday. When she woke up on the morning of her birthday with her father still in the hospital she did not want to get out of bed, let alone go to school. But her mother told her she needed to go, so she did, but she spent the entire morning dreading lunchtime. When the lunch bell finally rang, Megan stayed behind in her classroom while everyone else ran off to lunch. Eventually, she made it down the hall to the lunchroom, and there, sitting in a wheelchair with an I.V. in his arm, was her father. She ran over to him, saying, “Daddy, what are you doing here? You’re not supposed to be here!” Grinning, Megan’s father said, “It’s your birthday, isn’t it? I wouldn’t be anywhere in the world but here with you.”
  
I’d like you to think for a moment about your reactions to the first part of this article–before I shared the story about Megan and her father. Then compare that to your reaction to this story. If you are like most people, your reaction to the story was quite different than your reaction to the “ideas” I had been sharing about storytelling. You probably perked up just a little when I indicated I was going to share a story, and you probably paid a little more attention to what was being said. Megan’s illustration of family closeness put some flesh on what was initially just me giving you my opinion. It probably prompted you to use more than just your intellect to understand; you used your emotions as well.
 
The story also may have been motivating. Someone hearing this story might think “Hmmm, I could do something like that for my kids,” or “I can see why developing a pattern like that could be really important to my kids.” Especially men who did not have a strong father figure in their lives may feel some extra motivation to be a good father, and they may also come away from it with a concrete idea they could use in their own lives. A story sinks in, and we remember it. I have told this story about the young woman and her father many times to many groups of people, and I can’t help but feel emotional whenever I tell it and I know that others are also experiencing strong emotion for various reasons. Stories can have the effect of helping us remember an idea, a feeling, or a principle far better than if it is simply presented as an abstract concept.
 
Families and stories are very much intertwined. From birth to death, we are surrounded and nurtured by family members and the stories they tell. Your parents may tell you stories that parallel your own experiences, or your older siblings may have told you stories about when they were your age. The relationships we have with people are largely influenced by our shared experiences, which are most often and most effectively shared through stories. Once a family goes on a vacation or has an experience like a fire in the kitchen, that event becomes part of the family’s canon of stories, and it gets retold again and again. When children beg for a bedtime story, they are not just trying to avoid the inevitable, they are demonstrating, to borrow from the words of Jesus, that they do not live by bread alone. In addition to the food and shelter parents provide, children need the emotional, relational sustenance they get from the stories in the family’s own unique anthology of stories.
 

Why is storytelling so powerful?

If you’re not convinced that stories are powerful, consider how many of us spend the majority of our leisure time. We watch television, where, if we think at all actively, we can figure out how a story likely will end three minutes into the show. Or we skip reading our classroom assignments in favor of reading a novel. Yet because we like and need stories so much, we will continue watching even dumb shows or reading a novel even when we have more important things to do. If even silly or predictable stories keep busy adults glued to them, think how powerful are good stories told by people we love. Think of what we really want to hear when we talk with our friends about their most recent date or adventure– we want to hear “a good story.”
 
Much of storytelling today is a seamless part of day-to-day life, compared to life in the “old days,” when people would spend the day working and then gather as a family in the evenings to tell stories. There were even those bards who would travel from village to village telling stories, a tradition that has been replaced in our modern times by much more readily available– and yet far more passive– forms of entertainment. We still have stories, but we are now largely unconnected to them since they are told by professionals we do not know and who do not know or care about us. Thus, we don’t talk to each other enough and forge the strong emotional connections that sharing stories and experiences provide.
 
The stories our children crave are about life as it is lived. They have surprise twists, heroes, and action. Stories capture the essence of life. They often involve a change of heart. They give the best examples we have of how to change and why to change.
 
If you are at all reluctant about sharing your stories with your children, think about the greatest teachers you know or speakers you have heard. Your joy in their words probably comes, in large part, from their excellent storytelling. You, as a listener, remember stories more than you remember abstract ideas. This phenomenon has been documented. Most people remember a simple story better than they remember a theoretical abstraction of a great philosophy.
What kinds of stories should be told in families?
  
The stories we tell can be about anything. They can be fairytales, myths, or tall tales. They can be about Cinderella or the Three Bears. These are universal stories, and children love hearing them from their parents, especially if parents make the story their own by using different voices, gestures, motions, acting out the story, or other creative approaches. For example, it is one thing to tell your three-year old the story of Jonah and the Whale and another thing to “swallow” them up in your arms and then “vomit” them out onto the beach at Nineveh (the floor or a couch) at that point in the story. Finding ways to tell familiar stories in new and creative ways is important to help your children have those stories come alive and stay alive to them.
 
We can also make up stories. Like many, I make up stories and tell my children stories where they are the heroes and heroines. The names in the stories are either the exact names or names similar to theirs and the characters in the stories do brave, honest, kind, creative, and fun things. Making up stories where the children are the heroes can not only be very entertaining for them, but they can be inspirational as well. Another thing you can do is a round-robin activity, where one person starts the story and then stops and points to another family member who continues the story. If you have children who can really to get involved in this, they can be very creative–and you can have a lot more fun as a family than you can with a story that comes from a store.
 
Your children want to hear stories about when you were young, about experiences you had in school when you were their age, about how you and your spouse met, and about other significant–or even nonsignificant– events in your life. While parents should tell stories about themselves, they can also tell stories about their ancestors. Your children should know about grandma’s experience in immigrating to the United States, and about the character traits of their predecessors.
 
One story I often tell is about my father. He was a police officer for 17 years in our hometown during a time when there were a lot of problems with drugs, riots, and violence. And, somehow, our town was a kind of Mecca for these problems. I knew, as a boy, that he was out dealing with the “bad guys” and putting his life in danger, but one night that reality came home in a very powerful way. I was 12, and my best friend was over, having dinner with my family. Our house was on a busy street, and it was not uncommon to hear a car backfire. And, sure enough, while we were eating we heard what sounded like a car backfiring. But then we heard someone scream, “Help, I’ve been hit! I’ve been hit! Please help me!” Before my friend and I even realized someone had been shot, my father, who wasn’t on duty, ran into his bedroom, grabbed his gun, and ran out the door.
 
Of course, my friend and I thought this was really cool, so we ran to the front window to watch my dad go after the bad guys. My mom, however, had a different reaction, and she pulled us away from the window, pulled down the shade, locked the front door, and made us go into the back of the house. And then she just sat there and literally shook and shivered until my dad came home. That’s the first time I really realized that my dad was a hero. But I also realized, for the first time, what my mom had to live with every day, as her husband went off each day and put his life in danger.
 
My father now lives with us, and my telling this story helps my children appreciate the old guy who sits by them at the dinner table and gives them candy in a very different way than they would without that story. Now they think, “Wow, Papa was a real hero.” It is one way I turn the hearts of my children to my father.
 
We should also tell stories from family’s ethnic, national, or cultural background. I often tell my children about their great grandfather Iver from Norway, who had a very exciting life. He escaped death numerous times; in fact, he came into the port of Birmingham about two weeks after the Titanic set sail, and was hired as a merchant marine on the next major ship to set sail from that port.
 
After he immigrated to the United States, he worked as a logger in Minnesota and lived in a small cabin in the woods. Each day, he would go home for lunch, and one of his coworkers started coming over everyday as well, which disturbed Grandpa Iver because he was, by nature, a private person. He wanted his coworker to stop coming, but he was uncomfortable with confronting the man directly, so he had to use his wits. So the next time this man came over, Grandpa Iver took the plates off the table after they had finished lunch, put them on the floor, and allowed his dog to lick them clean. Grandpa Iver then put the plates back into the cupboard, and the man never came back for lunch. My kids love this story and it helps turn their hearts to their great grandfather who they never knew personally. We should also share stories that grow out of our religious beliefs and our faith. These stories may come from the Bible or other books we hold sacred, or they may come from our own experiences. If you believe in Jesus Christ, then you should talk about him more often than just during Christmastime. If we want to perpetuate our faith among our children, we need to share these sacred stories so that they will understand why we subscribe to a particular set of religious tenets. Our children deserve to hear more than once the story of how we came to know, believe in, and accept our most deeply cherished spiritual principles.
 
Now, a word of caution. Do not tell stories at the expense of other family members. It affects a family member if he or she becomes the brunt of unkind– even if humorous–family stories. As a parent, if you notice that one of your children is the target of hurtful stories, encourage your children to aim the stories in a new direction. You are the only one who can tell embarrassing stories about yourself. No one else should be able to do so, if it causes hurt feelings.  
 

When is the best time to tell family stories?

Anytime, all the time. Have this be an important activity that they will remember when they are older. Consider these possibilities:
  • At dinnertime: We have a tradition that when someone comes for dinner, we have to earn our dessert by sometime during the meal each person telling a story. In many families during a meal, one person or two tend to dominate the conversation, so this is a way to get all of the family members and the guests involved in the conversation. My family also likes to talk about dreams during meals. My children frequently ask me to tell them about my dreams because I have all kinds of crazy adventures when I am asleep and I love to ask my kids about their dreams as a window on their inner experience. Find creative ways to prolong mealtime since it is one of the best times to share stories in a relaxed atmosphere. 
  • At bedtime: Kids are very receptive at bedtime. They are relaxed. They have had dinner. They are feeling comfortable and warm. What you tell them will stick with them. Don’t spend this time telling them just about the Three Bears. Tell them the things of your soul and the stories that you most want them to remember and sink into their souls.
  • In the car: Most families have travel routines or games they play. You can also make stories, especially traveling stories, part of your time in the car. You can even have stories on tape. Nowadays, the television has ended up in many of our cars, and while that can help the time pass on a long trip, we need to do in the car what we do in our homes: as often as possible turn off the TV and tell each other stories.   
  • While working: When you are working together side-byside it is a great time to talk about when you were young. Telling stories can actually make the task less tedious for all involved. Your family may actually look forward to work if they know they are going to get to hear mom and dad tell good stories.

Saturday, November 10, 2012

The Perfect Family Movie

"Suburban supermom Eileen Cleary (Kathleen Turner) has been nominated for the coveted Catholic Woman of the Year Award at her local parish, and only one final test remains—introducing her family to the board for the seal of approval. Now, as she finally faces the reality of the nonconformist family she’s been glossing over for years, her meddling reaches hilarious new heights in this heartfelt and honest dysfunctional family comedy."
 
~The Perfect Family Website
 


Kiki Nakita Rating: A+ {Loved it}

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Want To Be A Housewife?

One of my favorite eras is the 1950’s. I love the cards you can now get where the word ‘housewife’ seems vintage. I adore the decade, the morals and the traditional roles. Although I believe women have the right, the right to go to college and have a career, I also believe we should have the choice if we wish to stay at home and take care of our flourishing families.

Gone are the days where women would awake their children gently, walk them to school, return home and launder the sheets, get down on your hands and knees to clean the floors and meet their neighbors for a coffee break, collect their children, and have them bathed and reading while awaiting dad’s home from work. Then the family would eat a home cooked meal in the dining room.
Nowadays we are so tired, that getting children ready is a rush as you have to get ready for work yourself. We work all day long, arrive home after our children to a babysitter and have little time to prepare dinner so what do we do, suggest takeout? Or perhaps just go out to eat?
 
 I have always enjoyed chatting with my grandmother, she is a very wise woman and she was married for many years. She unlike many housewives of her time wanted to work, my grandpa always said, “As long as your home before the children”. So she spoke to respective companies, asking for part time work, she did and for many years worked mornings only. She said it was ideal, she could contribute to the household and have time to spend with her family.
 
My dream as an interior design student is to eventually have my own business. I would like to have a studio from home and work on smaller residential and custom home rebuilding projects. My biggest dream is to have a large family, a comfortable home and to be around to hear my children laugh. If it means I don’t make as much money, I’m fine with that! The richest people are those with rich memories and a rich love.

 
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