THOUGHTS on LESSON #13
My three oldest children are now married, each with a toddler and another baby on the way in 2020. The initiation of those new family units (six, four and three years ago) has propelled me in an instant into the role of “in-law” several times. However, in my mind, once someone makes a commitment to one of my children they become true blue, through and through family, so I have tried to treat each with as much respect as my own child and refer to them as sons and daughters, not sons-in-law or daughter-in-law.
From my perspective, I have a positive relationship with each of my children’s spouses but have not been successful at getting any of them to call me Mom or my husband Dad, nor do my children call their in-laws by these titles, though I have encouraged it. I certainly haven't pushed any of them to use those terms with us, but they all know that I would prefer it as I request it casually when each comes into the family and then refer to myself as Mom in conversations and sign all communications that way, no matter what family member I am addressing.
In the article, "Creating Healthy Ties With In-Laws and Extended Families," it points out that “while awkward at first, stronger bonds are formed when in-law children call their in-law parents Dad and Mom and get past the idea that this somehow compromises their loyalty to their own parents” (Harper & Olsen, 2005). I can confirm that this one thing, at least for me, does feel distancing. I have accepted that this is how it will be and that they each have chosen what they are comfortable with (which is their adult prerogative) but each time they call me by my first name instead of my loved title, it is a little reminder that I am an in-law, which is one step removed. That is a small disappointment compared with the abundance of joys that these family additions have brought into our lives.
Elder Marvin J. Ashton has said, Wise parents, whose children have left to start their own families, realize their family role still continues, not in a realm of domination, control, regulation, supervision, or imposition, but in love, concern, and encouragement.” I think we have been successful at encouraging our children to create their own family units while still supporting them in love. I will admit that as a mother of married children and a grandmother of their offspring, it can sometimes be hard to bite my tongue, but I do, knowing how important it is for these young families to learn to rely on each other and progress by their own experience. It is no longer my place to give advice unless it’s specifically requested (Harper & Olsen, 2005). My place now, and always has been, is to give support and love.
Wednesday, December 11, 2019
Saturday, December 7, 2019
Becoming One
THOUGHTS on LESSON #12
In this day and age, there is so much push and pressure in the world to live for ourselves and focus on Me. Even among some couples, there is a cultural focus on individualized identities but we learn from D&C 38:27 that it is vital in the Lord’s eyes to be unified and if we aren’t then we are not His. Elder Henry B. Eyring has taught, “Our Heavenly Father wants our hearts to be knit together. That union in love is not simply an ideal. It is a necessity." (“That We May Be One,” Ensign, May 1998, 66 (Links to an external site.))
I was talking to my neighbor today, who is a strong woman and an active member of another Christian faith. She shared a wise message that she received as a personal prompting early in her marriage about this important relationship triangle. She said she was pondering and praying and she felt this question in her mind from God. “How will you learn to submit to Me without submitting to your husband's leadership? And how will you learn to submit to your husband without submitting to Me?!" She said as a wife and Christian, surrounded in today's society by a culture that demeans the leadership of men it is so important to remember the structure of marriage and how God set it up in the beginning.
That, of course, does not mean that men rule over their wives or that wives rule over their husbands. Men and women are equals in the sight of God and work in the marriage relationship as partners, but we have been given different divine gifts and responsibilities. Dr. Richard B. Miller said of male leadership, “A husband’s role as patriarch gives him the responsibility to serve his wife and family” (“Who Is the Boss? Power Relationships in Families”, BYU Conference on Family Life - March 28, 2008). In truth, we both have a responsibility to serve each other and look out for the interests of our spouses, no matter what role we are asked to fulfill.
Sometimes respecting my husbands' role means that I have to reel back my zeal and bite my tongue (a good exercise in restraint.) Sometimes it means that he has to get out of his comfort zone and be more assertive but as we respect each other, not just our roles, we both grow personally, we grow closer to each other and we grow closer to God. We become closer to being "one."
In this day and age, there is so much push and pressure in the world to live for ourselves and focus on Me. Even among some couples, there is a cultural focus on individualized identities but we learn from D&C 38:27 that it is vital in the Lord’s eyes to be unified and if we aren’t then we are not His. Elder Henry B. Eyring has taught, “Our Heavenly Father wants our hearts to be knit together. That union in love is not simply an ideal. It is a necessity." (“That We May Be One,” Ensign, May 1998, 66 (Links to an external site.))
I was talking to my neighbor today, who is a strong woman and an active member of another Christian faith. She shared a wise message that she received as a personal prompting early in her marriage about this important relationship triangle. She said she was pondering and praying and she felt this question in her mind from God. “How will you learn to submit to Me without submitting to your husband's leadership? And how will you learn to submit to your husband without submitting to Me?!" She said as a wife and Christian, surrounded in today's society by a culture that demeans the leadership of men it is so important to remember the structure of marriage and how God set it up in the beginning.
That, of course, does not mean that men rule over their wives or that wives rule over their husbands. Men and women are equals in the sight of God and work in the marriage relationship as partners, but we have been given different divine gifts and responsibilities. Dr. Richard B. Miller said of male leadership, “A husband’s role as patriarch gives him the responsibility to serve his wife and family” (“Who Is the Boss? Power Relationships in Families”, BYU Conference on Family Life - March 28, 2008). In truth, we both have a responsibility to serve each other and look out for the interests of our spouses, no matter what role we are asked to fulfill.
Sometimes respecting my husbands' role means that I have to reel back my zeal and bite my tongue (a good exercise in restraint.) Sometimes it means that he has to get out of his comfort zone and be more assertive but as we respect each other, not just our roles, we both grow personally, we grow closer to each other and we grow closer to God. We become closer to being "one."
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