Showing posts with label Moms and happiness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Moms and happiness. Show all posts

Happiness: Friday's Fave Five

Friday January 28, 2011

Time for a rundown of my favorite things from this week. Once again, a great time to look back and count your blessings! Thanks to Susanne from Living to Tell the Story for hosting. Visit Susanne and join us.

Here are five of my week’s blessings:

1. The satisfaction that comes from a job well done. My students are working on what I consider necessary and they consider an evil – their research papers. We’re now 2/3 of the way through the process. They’re taking their last set of notecards this weekend and shaping up their final outlines. Soon they’ll be writing rough drafts, and it’s downhill from there. Many of them have made great progress, and the process is beginning to make sense to them. That’s rewarding.

2. Joy that comes when your kids are happy. It’s hard to send your kids off to college when it’s several states away, but it’s so much easier when they’re happy. One of my boys is student teaching. How did that happen? He’s loving the classroom and it’s great to see them doing what they love. And the college freshman? He’s doing an awesome job in so many ways. It brings smiles.

3. Joy that goes beyond circumstances. My oldest son, Aiden’s daddy, is waiting for the right job. That’s tough, and so is a lot more about their lives right now. It hurts a mom’s heart. But when you see them hanging on and making the best of things, hanging onto each other and the Lord, and looking forward with hope, it does a mom’s heart good.

4. A grandson’s laughter. Yes, I got a video on my phone of Aiden just laughing away. It was precious. Music to my ears! (We’re hoping to see him again soon…)

5. A quote about family. Ours is spread across the country and involved in all kinds of different endeavors. But joined for life we are, and our lives all are fraught with beautiful memories. As George Eliot wrote:

What greater thing is there for human souls than to feel that they are joined for life – to be with each other in silent unspeakable memories.

Happy Friday – and welcome, February. Hope this finds you happy.

Mom Thoughts on Happiness

Tuesday April 20, 2010

Can you raise your happiness level and raise happy kids, too?

Sounds like a great idea, doesn't it?

Kristen at Motherese posted about an online book club, and the first book sounded really interesting to me: Raising Happiness: 10 Simple Steps for More Joyful Kids and Happier Parents. I got a copy and delved in.

It's been quite thought-provoking, in a good way. There is much in the book I agree with and a few things I take issue with. But overall, I feel like there's a lot to be gleaned from this book.

Can we make sure we – and our children – are happy?

Carter’s introduction lays a foundation for some scientific research about happiness, and it makes the point that it’s never too late in the parenting process to consider happiness as a skill.

In a section entitled “Out with the Guilt, In With Joy,” Carter gives us license to make mistakes. Yes, we're not perfect. In fact, she says we should "learn to embrace parenting mistakes as genuine paths to growth."

It's true -- we learn by falling. Remember your toddler's first steps? He figured out how to pick himself up and stand and step again. That's what we do as moms. But we have a hard time with that. We feel a huge responsibility and want to do it all "right." The author of Raising Happiness reminds us that conflict fuels change. When we have a tough time with something, we step back and assess our approach. And that's a good thing.

For me, grace and forgiveness figure in here, big-time. I’m thankful there’s One greater and wiser than me!

Carter advises mom to “Put On Your Oxygen Mask First” when dealing with your kids. (You know, like on the plane!) Mom’s happiness has something to do with her kids’ happiness. We model constantly; little eyes are always watching. We teach with every word, every action. If our lives are filled with happiness, we’ll be more engaged with our children and enjoy them more.

As Carter says, “Should you become faint from lack of oxygen, you won’t be much good to anyone at all.”

How to be happy? For some ideas, check out these two posts, Can a Mom Rejoice and Take Care of Yourself, Mom.

Carter also advises us to “Build a Village” – to surround our children with “other-parents,” people who love and mentor them along with us. We’ll never be everything to our children, and we have a responsibility to expand their world by exposing them to other interesting adults, too.

Her third chapter may have been the most interesting for me: “Expect Effort and Enjoyment, Not Perfection.” It’s full of ideas on how to foster a “growth mindset” in your kids – encouraging effort, determination and growth, not just natural ability or perfection. I plan to blog more about this concept in the future.

What do you think so far?

Can we raise our and our kids’ happiness quotient?

Have you found a way to build a village?

What about the parent perfection trap?

Chime in and let me know!

Join in the conversation.
Related Posts with Thumbnails