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Power-Decade Parenting

Family Friday: A Mother's Lasting Value

Published 12 months ago • 3 min read

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A Happy Mother's Day Weekend 🌸 to so many of you reading along each week. If you ever want to read past newsletters, here's where to go.

You can also forward this page to other parents of 3-13 year olds and I'll send you my 3-part Family Framework to help you build a home you love for a lifetime.

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Lasting Ideals My Mother Embraced

Moms naturally have the gift of belief in their kids.

  • They see the good and overlook the bad.
  • They go to endless lengths to be supportive.
  • They possess a relentless love for their children.

But they also have something that goes unspoken or unrecognized. They have their own story and values that shape the daily lives of their kids.

You cannot ignore the volume of hours that moms spend with their children over the years.

Like a great book that took an extended time to write, moms are slowly building into their kids a set of beliefs simply because they hold the title of Mom.

I'm sure you could sit down and in a few short minutes, put together a list of values your mom embodied to you. It is easy to overlook it, but you are doing the same for your kids.

Mom moments are not flashy or built on some viral concept. It's in the everyday rhythm that you are impacting your kids.

So, as proof and evidence of this, I wanted to share about my mom. (I think she was the first person who signed up for this newsletter when I started.)

These are 7 of the many ideals that my mom embodied and reinforced year after year. It's not meant for comparison, as if what you bring as a mom to your family is 'less than' in some way.

My hope is that a mom may realize that what she brings most often goes unnoticed and unrecognized and yet carries on.

I hope you're able to see the lifelong impact that moms have on their kids.

1. Do Hard Things

"Go the extra mile, son.
You shouldn't take the easy way out.
I know you'll be glad you made that choice one day."

She didn't just push this on her kids. She believed it was the way for the growth of her family.

2. Turn The Other Cheek

How do you respond when someone has wronged you? She would quote Jesus' teaching from the Sermon on the Mount.

“You have heard that it was said, ‘Eye for eye, and tooth for tooth.’ But I tell you, if anyone slaps you on the right cheek, turn to them the other cheek also." (Matthew 5:38-39)

3. Loving Your Siblings Is A Choice

Family is hard, full stop.

Whether you're living in the same house as kids or several states away as adults, loving your siblings is hard. It takes work, but she made and modeled the choice for her kids years.

4. Respect Your Dad

She pulled my sister and me aside and spoke well about our dad.
She didn't always agree, but she trusted his decisions.
She required of her kids to respect their father.

5. It's Never Too Late To Start

She found her "life's calling" at age 40. She loved teaching the Bible to women and did so faithfully for 25 years.

She uncovered her latent gifting at a time when a lot of her peers were pursuing an easier path. She started down a road that would define her at age 40.

6. Care For The Forgotten

People who had slipped in between the cracks in our town found a champion in my mom.

Every month for a couple of decades, she visited an elderly lady who lived by herself. She checked on a complete stranger crying in Panera and became a lifeline for her for years.

7. Live Without Regrets

We love to say that my dad loved to make money and my mom loved to spend his money.

But the truth is, she spent it on the things she loved and what would last.

Vacations with the family.
Trips to the orphanage in Africa.
Gifts to every shower she was invited to.

The Wrap Up

As Mother's Day approaches, I would beg ... don't lose your belief.

A mom's lasting value and voice in the lives of her kids is enduring.

To the Mom I would say ... you are building more into your kids than you'll ever realize. The young kids in your home will hold and embody so much of the good that you model and provide one day.

To the Dad I would say ... support the moms in your children's lives. When belief is in short supply, remind her how valuable she is to your kids.

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The 3-Part Family Framework

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Power-Decade Parenting

By Finley Robinson

Helping propel moms & dads of 3 to 13 year-olds to invest in their power-decade of parenting. Father of 3 teenagers and pastor of 20 years turned digital writer.

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