Monthly Archives: October 2015

Promises! Promises!

Train up a child…

Promises! Promises!

It is so easy to make promises to children, but not so easy to follow through with them. Why do we make promises to our children? Why don’t we follow through with them? How does it affect children when promises are not fulfilled?
When a child is annoying a parent by whining and pleading for something, it is so tempting to promise that thing in the future to get the child to quiet down. When a child is worried, it is almost automatic to say, “Everything’s going to be alright. Don’t worry!” To convince a child of our love, we might say, “I’ll always be there for you.” We might promise a child to attend a program or event in which a child is participating. We might promise to pick a child up at a certain time. All of these sound rather harmless.
The trouble with making promises is that many things can happen that keep us from fulfilling those promises no matter how good our intentions. We may not have the money to buy what the child wants in the future. When a child is worried, most of the time we really don’t know if everything will be alright. It is better to help the child find a solution, if possible, or to be honest and say something like, “We’ll try to get through this together. Let’s think how we can handle this problem.” None of us know what is in the future. We are not wise to promise that we will always be there for a child. It is better to try to prepare a child to do without us in case something tragic happens. It is much better to say that we will try really hard to attend a program or “I plan to pick you up at ——-.”
When we make promises and don’t keep them, we betray the trust that our children put in us. Breaking promises also fosters resentment, especially if we have promised to attend an event featuring a child. No one likes to be kept waiting when they have been told they would be picked up at a certain time. Waiting can generate resentment and even anger, but the feelings can subside if the parent has not promised and has a good reason for being late.
Just as we don’t like our children to make promises to us and then break them, our children don’t like us breaking our promises to them. It is much better to avoid making definite promises and simply use a phrase such as “I’ll try”. Often a child and parent can work together to figure out ways to accomplish needs and wants. It is always best to tell the truth and be honest with children. If they are not ready to know the whole truth, simply tell them the amount they can handle and say that you will probably tell them more later.
As we look into the innocent, trusting faces of our children, let us be thankful that we can teach them total honesty by setting a good example.

The Cost of Raising a Child

Train up a child…

The Cost of Raising a Child

One estimate of the cost to raise a child from birth to age 18 is $160,140.00. This breaks down to $8,889.67 a year, $740.81a month, $170.96 a week, and $24.42 each day. It is a little over a dollar for each hour. Sounds like a lot!
One might say, “Wow, we shouldn’t have children if we want to be rich! Just think of all the money we would have if we didn’t have children!”
Others might say, “My wealth is in my children!”
We get many things from our children that money can’t buy, so the money spent on them is possibly the very best investment we can make.
What do we get from our children?
Little wiggly squirming bodies climbing into bed with us in the mornings. (Often with wet, stinky diapers!)
Butterfly kisses
Innocent comments and constant curiosity (They make us feel so smart when we can explain things to them!)
A hand to hold (It may be sticky!)
Someone to laugh with
Someone to read to over and over and over (Often the same book)
A refrigerator covered with work of the children with backward letters and coloring outside the lines
Handmade Christmas ornaments to cherish year after year
Kiss the hurt away
Cut a wad of gum out of hair
Remove a splinter
Driving to activities
Fix lots of meals knowing that the food we choose is making them big and strong!’
Watch the first step, see the first haircut, hear the first word, see the first date, shudder at the thought of the first driver’s license!
An education in psychology, nursing, criminal justice, communications, that no one can match.
A grown child calling home for advice or a recipe
A place in the heart of each child that no one can ever take away.
Possible grandchildren and great-grandchildren
The power to heal a boo-boo, scare away the monsters under the bed, patch a broken heart, police a slumber party, ground them – so that one day they will love their children and others without counting the cost.
What a deal for the money!