(I shared this post with the IAHE blog, too, this week.)
I wasn't yet a mother when I first heard of the 'Terrible Two's'. I have to tell you I was really troubled by the term. It wasn't that I feared what would befall our household when we, Lord willing, would have a two-year-old of our own. No, it was the fact that the term was being used in the very presence of the two-year-old personages being described in such terms.
What must the little ones have thought? Maybe I'm in the minority, but I've always been inclined to think that our little ones comprehend far more that we often realize. I determined then and there never to use the term to describe children, in or out of a child's presence.
And I determined that, if, Lord willing, we should be blessed with a two-year-old, we should refer to that year as the 'Treasured Two's' instead.
Granted, there are particular days with children, or even phases of life, which may present more challenges, shall we say, than others. But it's amazing how much our own attitudes can affect the entire atmosphere of our home and imprint permanent messages on young hearts. Even in the context of challenges, the valuing of our relationships should never diminish.
It's in this context that today I am 'taking it to heart' (as I wrote about in the previous post titled The House of Mourning). None of us knows just how many days we will have on this earth, but the number is indeed finite. The question becomes, then, as we take that to heart, "What do I most want my children to remember?"
Will their memories of preschool days be of a mommy who was continually checking her watch to see how many minutes were left to 'endure' until nap time, when her relief would surely come? Or will their memories be of a mommy who obviously treasured each moment her children were awake, openly grateful for the sweet conversations and chances to pour truth into their little hearts and minds?
Will the children who attend school outside the home hear their mommy singing 'It's The Most Wonderful Time of The Year' when she can't wait to get them out of the house at the start of each school year? (I've actually heard this.) Or will their mommy be even more excited than they are for a school-cancelled snow day to spend together? (Thankfully, I've seen this, too!)
Are our homeschooled children conscious that we are just checking off a list of stuff that must be done together for school? Or do they know that their mama, though exhausted at times, would gladly choose their life of learning together over anything else she might be doing with her time?
In the context of what I want my children to remember, what should I be communicating? How should I be saying it? By what actions? How often? In what tone? How does what I want my children to remember translate into daily practicalities?
Yes, indeed, the living takes it to heart. . .