Welcome to the Yielded Mom's Blog

Yielded Moms is a group designed to help us identify our roles and goals as parents. We will meet together monthly to explore God’s word, gain parenting wisdom and share and exchange personal trials and triumphs. We will pray for each other and we will glean from those who are wise and have already done the work of parenting according to God’s plan. Yielding isn’t a hesitation, but rather a deliberate attempt to slow and take survey of what’s around before proceeding. My hope that is what we will do here. By surveying parenting around us, we will be equipped to make decisions to merge onto the busy parenting highway or put on the brakes at a parenting trial and spend some time working there until we get a green light.

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NEW POST : Free Museum Days in Chicago

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ALSO on this blog you will find message excerpts from each Yielded Moms meeting as well as the information used during the discussion time. I have also included some links to a few prayer resources. You will find near the end of the blog a list of Parenting Resources that I have used in my research.

Please feel free to share the blog with your friends who may find it helpful in their parenting journey. If you would like full copies of any of the excerpts found on the blog please email me and I would be happy to send you one. Thanks!

Yielded Moms meetings for Summer 2009

Meetings for 2009!


June: June 1st Ice Cream Social - Cold Stone Creamery, Deer Park 7:30pm

July: Coffee Talk??? TBA

Aug: TBA



Email me for more details and to receive an evite at

vtofilon@yahoo.com,
type 'Yielded Moms' in the subject line.

This group is open for new guests and please feel free to invite friends to join us too!

Parenting with Your Spouse

Parenting with Your Spouse

Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus, right?? What if the bible is true and men AND women are from Eden? Sometimes this truth is hard to believe. Isn’t it? Some of you are new to parenting and some of you have been parenting for a few years now. In either case, I’m sure you have noticed that the differences between men and women continue to be, well, existent, even in the world of parenting. My husband and I would like to think that we are pretty alike. We have the same type-A personality, we are first-borns, we like the same music and movies; we share thoughts about vacations and cars and dreams. I thought there would be little to discuss or disagree on when it came to parenting because we were ‘just alike’. We even had similar Christian family backgrounds and experienced similar disciplinary punishment from our parents as kids. But, we are not alike; we handle many parental situations differently and continue to disagree on some things. I have come to believe that this was God’s intent, and our children will become who God intends them to be if these differences continue to exist.
God had a parental design in place when he created man and woman. Made complete with the desire and the right tools, men and women procreate and populate! God even commands us to have children, “be fruitful and increase in number” says Genesis 1:28. IF he created us differently and created us to be parents, it would follow that God would give us clues as to how to parent well despite our differences. Tonight we are going to highlight some of the different instructions God gives to each sex, and how we can support our spouse as they aim to be the best parents to our children.
First hear this; your relationship with your spouse is of utmost importance. God created this relationship first. I believe I’m the best at parenting when things are going good in my marriage. Parenting expert Gary Ezzo says, “The husband-wife union is not just a good first step towards child-rearing. It is a necessary one. Too often, parents lose sight of this fact, getting lost in a parenting wonderland of photos, footsteps, and the first words. Baby becomes central to their existence. Yet the greatest overall influence you will have on your children will not come in your role as an individual parent, but in your joint role as husband and wife.” This group is designed primarily for moms to connect with other moms and sift through parenting advice, literature and experience. However, all this can be undone, without a growing marriage. Malachi 2:15a says, “God made husbands and wives to become one body and one spirit for His purpose – so they would have children who are true to God.” I urge you to work at your marriage. Our children are watching our every movement, and you can be they are watching how we are in relationship with our spouse.
Instructions for fathers: This information is not given so we can jump in the car after spending time together here tonight and drive home and teach our husbands. I share this so that we might better understand the role our husbands play as fathers and the way we are to support them. Fathers and husbands carry an enormous burden. They are driven to provide financial stability even husbands whose wives work and contribute significantly to the family income. It is in their DNA. They work to provide and build a career and yet that leaves them little time to be with the family. In Power of a Praying Wife Stormie Omartain says, “Thoughts of failure and inadequacy are what cause so many fathers to give up, leave, become overbearing from trying to hard, or develop a passive attitude and fade into the background of their children’s lives.” Our husbands have a heavy burden to carry.
The fatherly challenge says Dr David Blankenhorn is to be a good family man; a man who puts his family first. James Dobson writes his duties as father and husband are to serve as the family provider, to serve as the leader of the clan, to serve as protector, to provide spiritual direction at home. This is not an easy challenge, especially when fathers and husbands have so much opposition and confusion just from their wives. Have you ever wanted your husband home from work earlier and more often, and yet had a list of things you wanted to buy that were costly? They work harder and longer to be more successful and provide more money which takes them away from the family. They stay home more and miss out on the project that could have gave them the edge in a promotion, forfeiting the money needed to meet the lifestyle and material desires of their wives. How confusing for them!
The support we can give them as wives is crucial. I believe prayer is a key component. We can pray that they are good fathers. Stormie Omartain says, “If they are tortured with doubt and burdened with a sense of responsibility, we can minimize these feelings with our prayers.” Here are a few suggestions on what to pray.

Pray for clarity and guidance on how to handle parenting challenges.
Pray that he has desire and time to spend in God’s presence
Pray that he doesn’t doubt God’s love for him
Pray for healing where he has had a fallen or failed relationship with his own father
Pray that he knows how important he is to his children

Another key component in supporting our husbands in their role as parents is to give them time. So often I find myself being impatient with my husband’s ability or desire to father or parent. Becoming a father is a completely other experience than becoming a mother. Just the sheer bonding time that elapses during pregnancy leaves a father feeling like he’s an outsider from the start. So as wives, as mothers, we have to give these men a chance to adjust and grow and develop nurturing skills and so much more!
Third, there are so many things that we can say that will build their confidence as a father, and there are many things said that can tear confidence down. James Dobson says in his book Bringing up Boys, ‘If you show respect to him as a man, (your children) they will be more inclined to admire and emulate them.” Consider the following story,
I vividly recall sitting at the dinner table with my two brothers and father and mother and cringing at my mother’s attacks on my father. “Look at him,” she would say in Yiddish. “His shoulders are bent down, he’s a failure. He doesn’t’ have the courage to get a better job or make more money. He’s a beaten man.” He would keep his eyes pointed toward his plate and never answer her. She never extolled his virtues or persistence or the fact that he worked so hard. Instead she constantly focused on the negative and created an image to his three sons of a man without fight, crushed by a world over which he had no control.
His not fighting back against her constant criticism had the effect of confirming its validity to her sons. And my mother’s treatment and the picture of my father did not convey to me that marriage was happy state of being, or that women were basically people. I was not especially motivated to assume the role of husband and father myself from my observations of my whipped father.
Maybe we don’t seem this awful, but we need to look and listen to what we are saying to our husbands about their character and parenting. Remember that the day you became a mother, your husband became a father. You started this journey at the same time…you grow together.

Parenting with Your Spouse Discussion Questions

Do you and your husband have differences in the way you parent?



Because the husband-wife relationship was created by God first, and because a good marriage is important to successful parenting, what is one way you can grow your marriage?



List 3 positive things your husband does as a father. This week tell him what those things are.



Think of a way your husband struggles as a parent. Write it on the note card provided and commit to praying for him in this area weekly.



Reflect on a time when you criticized the way your husband handled a particular parenting issue. Could you have held your tongue? Or at minimum said something constructive?


Name one area where you need to be less controlling.



Think of a time when you looked at your child and thought before you was a “mini-me.” Are there images of Father God that you have because of the model your parents gave?
 

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