Thursday, March 28, 2013
Parents with Respect
This week we watched a great video that listed four qualities that are important to parenting: responsibility, cooperation, respect, and courage. It will help them to learn how to respond to opportunities and
challenges, work with others, reciprocate respect, and to "have a
willingness or ability to face challenges/experiences to an unknown
problem" (Brother Williams). To use an active parenting style, the parents must choose to be a team with the children, while upholding authority respectively. We should want to become parents because they will be the ones who take care of the world, we want the best for our future generations even if it does not influence us directly. We learned that children cooperate with parents much better when they are given choices, included in decision making (such as consequences of disobeying the commitments made to the parents), and are treated in all situations with love instead of anger and hostility. We hope the best for our children, that they may have even better lives than the ones we lived. In parenting as a loving and respectful team, the children will be better prepared to "survive and thrive in the world they are going to live in". What I hope some people understand is that parenting can be just as
rewarding for the parents as it can for the children. Who said you can't teach an old dog new tricks? Parents can learn how to live unselfishly and more wholesome by raising children because they want to be a good example. When parenting,
you gain a greater understanding of unconditional love and commitment. You are refined as a person with guided with love from your Heavenly Father and spouse. An old saying my elementary school overused is, "there is no I in team". I think it most certainly can be applied to the family because it requires that we work together and must put our family's needs above our own selfish needs. A wonderful blessing from parenting with respect comes from the reciprocated love and enjoyment of spending time together, which ironically gives every parent what they really want- greater cooperation from their children.
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
The Importance of a Homemaker
The term homemaker has become a bit "outdated". But the importance of the role has since remained, although becoming covered up by the feminist's protests for equality. Women really began entering the work force during WWII as a means to produce the goods and services need in war needed by the men serving in the war. After the men came home, some women fought to keep their jobs and fought returning back to being a homemaker. This was a damaging stepping stone for families because it took mom's out of the home and left the children to return home to an empty house or seek care outside of the home. Some of the disruptions of families from moms not being home with the kids after school are: siblings coming home to each other, more arguing because mom is not there to mediate, older children having to take on more responsibilities to watch over the younger siblings, schedules are disrupted since the parents get home later and have to fulfill all the responsibilities during what used to be "family time". Now "family time" after homework time is filled with trips to the grocery stores, chores, homework, cooking dinner, and if there is time left over, managing to squeeze in some time to discuss each other's days. This is leading to and has led to families becoming more distant with one another and families not knowing each other as well because they are not able to spend as much time with family. It is heartbreaking to see how many families are putting family time as a low priority because of work, school, and all of the other activities that distract families from being together. This is one of Satan's ploys in destroying families and has covered it well to make it appear like the world suddenly does not have enough hours in the day to include family time. Ideally, homemakers are important because it gives families more time to talk about each other's days, having dinner together, kids helping the mom cook, and mom being able to teach valuable lessons to the children.
Wednesday, March 13, 2013
Effects of Miscommunication
Are you partaking in casual conversation in your text message or are you MAKING A POINT?! This week we discussed the Feedback Loop. It was really interesting to understand how thoughts and feelings are portrayed and received/interpreted. The Feedback Loop describes the communication process in which one person expresses or says something is with meaning, is then aided by or through the media to be decoded through interpretation by the listener, and finally, the listener reacts with their thoughts and feelings in regards to the topic. The media (words, tones, or non-verbal cues) can help us decipher what the speaker is actually trying to say. As the listener, we combine the words with the tone in which the words were said or with non-verbal cues, such as eye rolling or a smiling. If the speaker has a lot on their mind and is absentmindedly partaking in the conversation, the media cues they use may be in reaction to what is on their mind or what they are talking about. For instance, the speaker just got off the phone after a frustrating phone conversation in which their voice was loud. If the speaker says something to the listener right after, his tone may still match that from the heated argument instead of being in reference to the new interaction with the listener. Misinterpreting thoughts or feelings from someone is especially easy to do through some form of text communication, whether it is text messages, Facebook, email, etc. If the sender of the message adds too many exclamation marks, the reader may think the sender was portraying anger or harsh emotions. If the sender said, "I thought you said you vacuumed!!!!!!" the reader may be quite appalled and may even snap back with a rude comment. But if the sender said, "I thought you vacuumed." The reader might be more apt to replying in a kind manner that he was going to, but got stuck at campus longer than anticipated, and perhaps they he will get to it when he gets home. In more serious scenarios, things can escalate real quickly if the sender and the reader are not careful to encode or decode the messages effectively. It is important, as communication via text becomes increasingly popular, that the messages sent and received are taken with precaution. What could easily be interpreted as someone smiling during a conversation face-to-face, but a smiley face emoticon that is sent through a text message instead can be mistaken as someone flirting. If a third party then sees that message, they could misinterpret how it was meant and all sorts of miscommunication problems come into play. Text communication can be beneficial to a relationship, friendship, etc. or it can be severely damaging. I loved the quote that was shared in the class by Harold B. Lee, "[w]e should communicate so clearly, not only that we can be understood, but that we can not be misunderstood". I think it is important to strive to live by this quote every time we are involved in text communications because it can prevent a lot of unnecessary tensions/problems or damaging miscommunication.
Wednesday, March 6, 2013
Crises - Helpful or Harmful?
In class we defined crises as "danger + opportunity". No one can be lucky enough to go through life without facing the trials of crises. But even if it were possible, would we want to? Would we purposely choose to live without crises? It might sound nice, but what good would it do for us? It is like asking Heavenly Father why we couldn't all just stay in the pre-Earth life if we were already converted, what is the purpose of coming to Earth. The purpose is to face these trials and crises and to stretch and grow. We are given families for special purposes to teach and learn from each other, to learn how to become closer. Experience helps us to learn how to handle crises in the future. Crises can do one of two things - it can build a family up or it can tear it apart. It is all in how a family chooses to handle the crises. Losing loved ones, finding out about a terminal illness, etc. those are all difficult scenarios to handle. But do we stick our head in the sand and pretend nothing is happening - limiting our growth from the crisis - OR do we choose to pull together as a family, depend on each other, comfort one another? The right choice is obvious, but it is not always easy to accomplish. It is my sincerest hope that every person chooses the right way of handling crises, that our future families will be stronger than our generation of families were. Hold your families close and dear, go to them before anyone else when you are going through a difficult time, and cherish those moments of unity. A happier, healthier cohesive family handles conflict better than those families who are more centrifugal or "off-balanced" families.
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