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Honesty
necessary for a healthy home life
Home happens when honesty is in residence.
Family is a group of people who have enough integrity of mind and
spirit to say at times, "There are some things I cannot fix for
you."
When "new math" appeared on the academic scene, my parents admitted
they could not help us. If we used "old math," they promised their
assistance. But they acknowledged they didn't know the new-fangled
stuff and frankly had no inclination (aptitude?) to learn it.
With my own children, I've learned I can't be all things to them.
Athletic pursuits render me a cheerleader at best. And their
calculators send me on a quick retreat to the safety of my keyboard.
I have welcomed tutors, coaches and instructors when my limits began
to limit my children.
Honesty demanded that I say, "I don't know. I can't fix it for you.
I will cry with you, listen to you, but there are some things that
I, as your parent, with all my love for you, cannot fix."
Relationship changes are one of the hardest scenarios to watch. When
parent-arranged play dates melt into selective invitations, we watch
our children grow as they experience the joy and pain of
friendships, love and heartbreak.
Honesty also demands, as someone suggested, that we learn when to
pat each other, and with what to pat each other, and on which end.
Confrontation "in love" is often required in family life. The use of
such words as "no," "maybe" and "wait" may be more important than a
quick "yes" that produces over-indulged offspring with more foliage
than root.
Practicing "tough love" creates boundaries to shore up errant
choices, breeding a security that shows someone cares enough to say
"no."
Yet home also happens when each person feels shelter from life's
storms.
For a small child, a storm may be the loss of a pet. When our German
shepherd died, we drove to the family homeplace to lay to rest our
beloved dog. As my father placed the last shovel of dirt tenderly
over the mound, we asked him to say something.
He prayed and thanked God for the gift of animals who teach us what
unconditional love is.
Children are too young to meet loss alone. (For that matter, is
anyone ever old enough to face loss alone?)
Teenagers seldom appear to need much family, except to rebel and
complain. But don't let them fool you. They need familiar landscape
-- faces, furniture, fixtures -- when storms come and decisions must
be faced.
And when college kids return, they bring with them their own
new-fangled ideas that have seeped into those pliable minds. And
yes, we may still have to remind them who's in charge with a gentle,
"My house, my rules," clarification.
But if we're lucky, they share with us the inside track of their
journey. And we realize our limitations may be our children's
launching pads.
Home happens when we feel loved, accepted and secure amid life's
storms.
And honesty prevails.


5/27/2007 The Herald-Dispatch
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