I understand wanting your child to have every opportunity life offers. I get wanting them to become well rounded people with a variety of abilities and skills. I certainly want that for my kids too. But, somehow I think we are losing some skills in our effort to skill them in so many areas. We are taking away some essential life skills by trying to fill up each moment of everyday.
There are several things I think we can teach our kids by paring down our lives and deciding to keep things simple. Let me list for you a few advantages:
1) Your child will learn that life doesn't revolve around them. If you are spending every night running Sarah to every practice and social activity known to man, then Sarah is for sure believing that it is all about her. Of course we want our kids to know they are important, but teaching them their value, and having them feel entitled are two different things. A child can understand they are a valuable person by taking time to listen to them and by allowing them to contribute to the "running" of the house...and by that I mean....chores. They are fully capable of helping with the cooking, cleaning, helping with groceries, mowing the lawn, washing clothes, and many other things that go into keeping the household running. When you busy your life with everything "child" then everything else gets put on a back burner.
All chores have to be delayed.
McDonald's employees start calling you by name.
Husbands and wives forget that they are...well....husbands and wives as well as mamas and daddy's.
Teaching your child that there are multiple people in the household, all needing to have their needs met as well will in the long run be healthier.
Photo by Ryan Hafey on Unsplash |
3) Learn to say "I'll get back to you on that". As I mentioned earlier, being a people pleaser causes me to say "yes" too often and too quickly. I have just recently vowed to myself to always give people an answer later rather than sooner. Knowing my tendencies to take on more than I can handle, it is much better for me to take the request back home and think on it, see if I can fulfill it with whatever else I have on my plate, and then give the person my answer. It might possibly still be yes, but I at least have had the opportunity to think through if it will fit into our routine and schedule.
4) Slow and lazy do not mean the same thing. Productivity is very valuable to me. I really do not like "lazy". But, deciding to slow things down and being lazy are not synonymous. Purposefully keeping things simple, creating time for thought, conversations, and relaxation is healthy, not lazy.
I love to look at houses as I drive down the road. I see all of these beautiful homes with lovely porches and decks, beautifully manicured yards, and maybe even a relaxing pool in the back yard. What I don't see are people enjoying them. Rarely do I see someone with their feet propped up enjoying their comfy porch furniture. I don't hear the splash of the water from the pools too often, and the decks look like they are rarely used. I want to change that for myself and for my family.
I remember as a child, sitting each evening on the steps of our front porch as the sun went down.
Photo by Monica Silva on Unsplash |
There was conversation.
There was quiet.
There were crickets chirping and frogs croaking.
And occasionally there was the collecting of firefly's.
There was connection.
Perhaps you are trying to figure out how to lesson the stress of life. Maybe you have brought children into your home who have come from hard places and the hectic schedule you have set up is not working. Dear friend, slow down. Breathe. Inhale the true value of simplifying and exhale the clutter that wants to suck us back in. Simplify is more than a cute sign to display in your living room. It is a decision.
Resist.
Breathe deeply.
Enjoy.
Every wound healed. Every child, a home.
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