Guarding Against Entitlement Part 1: Helping Kids Feel Needed + FEEBIE

I recently heard a radio program with guest Kay Wills Wyma who spoke about “ending entitlement” in children (8/29/12: Family Life Today).  It was kind of a watershed moment for me, standing in the kitchen that day. Because as much as I’d like to think that our kids are grateful and giving, never struggling with the “gimmes” and “I want it’s!”, we all know that sin is ever before us.

I get that way, too.

Can you relate, mom?

  • A trip to Costco is wrought with “OOOh! I should get that!” or “Wow–just $10!” I have to stop and ask whether I model entitlement to my little ones.
  • Am I quick to deny myself?
  • Am I willing to say “no” to myself even when it’s hard? If not, is it reasonable to expect that from my children?

One of Kay Wyma’s points was that in our society, much unlike earlier generations, we don’t need our children — especially when they’re teens. Our children are not needed to help build a home. To maintain a farm. To hunt for food. To collect eggs for breakfast.

In effect, we have turned our kids into little consumers whom we serve and love without expecting anything in return. The result is often times a lack of purpose as kids grow older, which statistics say can lead to depression and low self-esteem.

What have we lost in creating consumers?

Kay would argue that both kids and parents have lost out on powerful moments of serving, of gratitude, of teaching, and spiritual growth.

  • How can we expect our children to naturally “offer to help” if we haven’t shown them what it looks like to do so?
  • How can we expect a clean bedroom when we haven’t taught what a clean bedroom looks like?
  • How can we expect our kids to leave our nest with cooking, laundry, and bill-paying skills if we’ve never sat down and given direct instruction?

Indeed, we set ourselves up for kids who not only want us to do everything for them, but need us to do everything…because in the truest sense, they have not mastered basic life skills for themselves.

Where to begin:

One of Kay’s ideas that resonated with me was that of getting kids involved in the kitchen. It’s a great place to start teaching them and helping them to feel needed.

She argues that kids of nearly all ages can do something to be helpful in the preparation of a meal — and they should. In her home, Kay began to have the children take turns planning a meal, choosing a helper (sous chef), creating a shopping list based on that meal, and then actually cooking the meal.

Now I know some of you are saying, “No Way!! You don’t know my kid!”  But here’s a list of ways that even little ones can help:

  • end beans
  • wash fruits/veggies
  • roll protein in panko or breadcrumbs for another to bake/fry
  • peel potatoes and carrots
  • prepare the bread or rolls to be warmed in the oven
  • add salt & pepper with your help
  • use a lettuce knife to prepare a salad (these are usually plastic and not as sharp as a regular knife)
  • butter the bread for grilled cheese; slice & add cheese (panini makers make this easy!)
  • collect taco toppings and put them into bowls for serving
My youngest is not yet seven and he has proven to be a huge helper in the kitchen! And guess what? The more he sees his brother and sister helping, the more he wants to do!

We’ve been involving our kids as chefs for the past three weeks and it has been wonderful. Not only are they learning to serve the family, but with me nearby to oversee and guide, the kids get extra time with mom.

Download my meal planner today and take the weekend to explain “the new normal” to your kids over the weekend. You’ll see their little hearts change before your very eyes! 

Click and drag on the image or CLICK HERE for pdf.

NEXT WEEK: Guarding Against Entitlement Part 2: Implementing Chores

Valentine’s Day + 1

click photo for credit

I had the best intentions, friends…thee best. I had planned to create some printables and a grand scheme for Valentine’s Day, but alas, a busy life with unexpected sickness sent my plans to the backburner.

Instead, I want to share a fun idea that we do each year on Valentine’s Day, and then offer a special devotional for you to do with your family (taken from this month’s Unofficial Homeschooler Monthly Newsletter).

For the past several years, my husband and I have postponed our own date and celebrated the 14th with our kids, doing our best to model love within a family as being the most important kind of human love they can know. Our prayer is that this kind of love will become a weighty anchor as we inch closer to the teen years and our children begin to explore “the other kind” of love.

Borrowing an idea from our pastor, we serve a very special meal for our kids much like we do on New Year’s Eve. We unearth our wedding china and present a love feast at our dining room table (rather than huddling stools around our kitchen island as we often do!). We dress up and make it special—like we’re on a date together. 

In a few years we’ll all be begging our kids to date us!!

During this meal we write Valentines to each other and express our love specifically on paper. We offer examples of the small moments that have made for big memories, and then we read them aloud at the table.

After dinner we plan scavenger hunts or make cookies for the neighbors or read a new book together– we mix it up. This year, one of the things we’ll be doing is this devotional; why not try it at your house?

There’s no better time than Valentine’s Day to bring your attention back to the source of all love: Our God and Lord Jesus Christ.

Scripture Focus: 1 John 4:7-21
The Bible is full of all kinds of words that describe our great God. This Valentine’s Day:

  • read the scripture focus with your kids
  • have your family write down all the words or key phrases that describe God while you’re reading
  • when you finish with the passage, discuss all the things you wrote down.
  • talk about the themes that you hear emerging. Are there repetitions? Are there strong patterns?
  • try to find a “theme” for each member in your family (for example: we live in God, and He in us; God loved us first, etc.)
  • have each member of your family draw something that represents his/her theme (don’t write the theme on the paper yet!)
  • when finished, trade drawings and try to guess each other’s “God themes.”
  • once all pictures have been discussed, write the theme somewhere on the paper and display them all to remind your family of God’s love this Valentine’s Day.

 

Advent Wreaths: Part 2 of 3 in our Advent Series

The things we’re doing this Advent season are certainly not revolutionary, but they are intentional.

As I stated last time, in the past we’ve done little more than read Christ’s birth narrative in Luke to prepare for Christmas, however I wanted this year to be different.

To get us moving down a more contemplative path, I found this great Advent Wreath at our local Family Christian Store (I have since added the white center candle). We decided it should live at the center of our table so it receives our attention during supper.

Next, I searched online for candle readings to accompany our lighting of each candle. Of course, in the spirit of Advent, our kids fight over who gets to light each one…something we’re trying to combat by talking about silent nights and sleeping in heavenly peace.

Making the point of having this “wreath” on our dining room table also forces us to sit down and enjoy our meals at a more leisurely pace —- something that, frankly, is difficult with my husband’s work schedule and our evening activities, but something we strive for nonetheless.

Lastly, although the shiny centerpieces at Costco did garner my attention and brief consideration, I’m trying to simplify this year and find small ways to draw our family closer to the manger.

  • We left our fireplace mantle a little less adorned.
  • We haven’t hung up our stockings yet — those will go up on Christmas Eve.
  • We gave ourselves the freedom to throw away the decorations we bought at newlyweds 13 years ago, and only hung up those things that we find beautiful and special.
You may be thinking, Those are all cosmetic changes! Big deal!
I can understand that. But for me, changing the look of our home had changed our focus. I don’t feel as bogged down in the commercialism. I don’t feel as cluttered.
And feeling less cluttered means that I feel more peace. And to me, that’s what I want Advent to be about.
Next Time: another $2.99 purchase for a quick daily Advent read.

 

Simply SMASHING!

If 100% angus beef, piles of Michigan olives, french fries tossed in olive oil and sprinkled with herbs sounds like heaven on a plate, you’re right. 

When I was invited to a free Smashburger lunch by some of my local blogging friends, I was excited to try something new and more than a little excited about the idea of a famous hamburger. Of course I knew I’d have to take my son along for authentic kid-approval at an establishment that does not coerce with cheaply-made toys. Instead, most thankfully, we discovered that they coerce with mind-blowing flavor on a family-friendly budget.

Smashburger did not disappoint! I practically inhaled my “Michigan Olive Burger,” licking my fingers without shame until it had disappeared on the plate before my eyes.

The Haagen-Dazs Butterfinger milk shake thrilled my son, and I loved–luuuuvvved– spooning the frozen goodness out of the stainless steel blender canister housing our left-overs. I may have allowed my eyes to roll back in my head with delight.

Smashburger also makes it fun for kids to practice their reading. The menus are written out with small icons next to nearly every item so that young readers, like mine, have clues to help them. We took one home with us and my son studied it for most of the drive, identifying photos and trying to connect them to key words on the menu.

…But let’s be honest: you’re going to be so busy dipping these:

…into this awesome Sweet Baby Ray’s + Michigan Cherries BBQ mixture…

…that reading will probably be the last thing on your mind. [My son didn't even reach for the ketchup!]

You’ll be too busy drooling and planning your next visit to worry about new words and cute menu icons!

If you’re not grabbing your keys right now to head out the door, maybe some of these facts will sway you to give it a try:

  • Smashburger uses 100% Angus beef which they can trace to the Scottish farms where it originates. They know where the beef comes from, down to the farmer! [amazing!]
  • They use fresh beef only–it’s never frozen!
  • We learned that my son’s chicken tenders [which were really great] are “smashed” to achieve uniform size for uniform cooking, and they are hand breaded to order!
  • Prices are reasonable! Kids meals are $4 and grown-up hamburgers generally range from $5-7…and worth the shirt off your back.
  • The Haagen Dazs shakes are, well, perfect. I may have mentioned that, but it deserves repeating.
  • The Grand Rapids location opens TOMORROW, October 25!!

Have you been to a Smashburger? What was the best thing you ate there?

3 More Reasons to Get Your Kids in the Kitchen

Sometimes there’s nothing better for a sour heart than time in the kitchen.

In fact, so convinced am I, that I’m nearly willing to bet it might be a verse in the Bible. Nearly wiling…

And though I promised not to speak of the details, I will say that tonight two of our children cooked dinner for our family and I was given a side of redemption at the beauty of such a natural teachable moment unfolding before my pleasantly surprised eyes.

These kids:

  • Designed the menu: burritos and applesauce
  • Thawed and cooked the meat
  • Seasoned the meat and made the sauce
  • Washed and chopped both lettuce and tomatoes
  • Constructed the burritos and topped them
  • I graciously contributed homemade applesauce, warm off the stove

Look at those knife skills!

Burritos in progress...

Ta-DAH!!!

 

So what did my little angels learn??

1. Preparing a meal for a family takes time and the process should be honored.

2. When presenting a completed dish to another, hearing their kind words are the best reward.

3. Cleaning up is a breeze when we work together. Plus, it gives us time to talk about the day.

What did I learn? I learned three more reasons to get the kids in the kitchen   :)

Do your kids help you in the kitchen? What lessons have you learned?

 

 

 

Doodle While You Wait

Have you ever found yourself “taking notes” during a meeting and instead mindlessly filled the margins of your page with doodles? Personally, my best artwork is birthed during those long calls to the cable company when I’m placed on hold and asked to press “7″ if I think my TV might blow up.

I’m kidding. About the blowing up, that is.

Still, doodling is a fun pass time and a great way to express yourself creatively. That’s why I love this book by Deborah Zemke,Doodle At Lunch: 36 Tear-Off Placemats. Laid out in A-B-C fashion, Zemke offers doodle starters for each letter of the alphabet, and incorporates the letter into the artwork itself! It’s genius!

For example, “M” offers a handful of steps that lead the artist toward a completed doodle of a mouse. The first pencil stroke is to draw an “m”. Guess what part of the mouse that becomes? His ears! “T” helps the doodler draw a T-Rex. The first steps of that picture are a series of very tiny capital “T’s” which go on to form the teeth of the dino. It’s incredibly creative and absolutely attainable for elementary-aged children.

The  wonderful culmination of all the doodling and coloring is that your child has created his or her own placemat! The drawings take only a handful of minutes, but my kids were so hooked they each did three while they ate. They’re now taped on our slider window on display.

I can’t wait to sneak a few of these into a restaurant the next time we go out. What an easy way to keep hungry kids at bay and help them to be patient during a long wait.

Bring a pencil and crayons…and pass the bread basket. Your kids will love this book!

What creative things have you been doing during lunchtime?

 

Onomonopia + Fireworks

photo: mlive.com

Last night as we sat nestled snuggly in the tender grass of July, my mind wandered back here, wondering how fireworks could be brought into our home “classroom.” The first thing that came to me was a simple onomonopia lesson: introduce this silly-sounding term to your children as the name given to words that are spelled how they sound. For instance: crack, snap, zoom.

So while you’re preparing dinner tonight:

  • give each kid a blank piece of paper and crayons
  • invite them to draw the fireworks they saw last night
  • talk about onomonopia and offer several examples
  • have your little ones write down 3 words that they think best describe the sounds they remember from Fourth of July fireworks

Send your pretty artwork to the kids you’re sponsoring through World Vision or Compassion International! Fold up something lovely from your world and send it into theirs.

How did you celebrate the Fourth? Did your kids enjoy the fireworks?

 

 

Kids in the Kitchen?

I hope I’m not scaring you away with yet another chart! By now you’re probably convinced I’m running around the house with a marker in one hand and a box of gold stars in the other, just waiting for the opportunity to press a five-pointed sticker neatly into a printed box.

HA!

Let me assure you that is not the case! While I do use these things at home with our kids, I view them as a helpful sideshow–not as something that runs the show. For us they’re a fun diversion, a motivator, and something to keep us moving forward in the direction we’re seeking to move. If over time they morph into a demanding task-master or something that makes us feel guilty, they’ll be trotting the quick trail to the recycle bin.

SO! With that said, here’s your “sideshow” for the day: a meal planner that involves the kids. Click to download this FREEBIE!

 

I’ve used a meal planner nearly identical to this for years [something I made back in the day], but have never had one that allowed space for writing in the name of my “sous chef,” or, child helper.

As our kids have gotten older and can be trusted with more responsibility, we have involved them more and more with the preparation and cooking of our meals. Now when I sit to plan out our menu for the week* I stop to consider how we might assign appropriate tasks for our children to help with. This chart shows which day they will be expected to strap on their apron and join me in the kitchen, grinning with eager anticipation, no doubt.

Below are a few ideas for jobs that kids can do. Please stop to use your best judgement as to the safety of each task and how it relates to the responsibility and skill-levels of your children. Remember to supervise!

  • washing vegetables and fruit
  • ending beans
  • scrubbing potatoes
  • peeling potatoes
  • mixing marinades
  • measuring components to recipes
  • operating the blender or hand mixer
  • adding salt and pepper to proteins [careful here!]
  • assembling things that go on bread, buns, or tortillas [tuna melts, hamburgers, hot dogs, wraps, tacos, burritos, etc.]
  • operating the microwave
  • chopping salad fixings

Have fun involving your kids [and husband!] in meal prep this week! Not only does it lighten your load, but the easy banter provides opportunities for you to hear about their day, learn of their struggles, and check in with friendship issues.

*PS: Hey Mom, if you’ve not gotten in the habit of planning your meals each week, let me encourage you to give it a try! Not only does it help your stress level around 4 pm when you’re standing, bewildered, in front of your empty pantry [not me, right?! wink...], but it makes shopping a breeze! And by focussing just on what you’ll need for these meals, you’ll spend less than you would tossing unneeded items in your cart.

Give it a whirl!

How do you involve your kids in the kitchen? Share your successes by leaving a comment!

Mealtime Convos

Last month I won a book at a blog that I subscribe to and was thrilled not only because it meant that I actually WON something [gasp!], but because it was a book by Mary DeMuth, a Christian author I truly admire. I have had the wonderful opportunity to read and review four of Mary’s recent books and was also blessed to meet her two years ago at a conference. Mary’s humility, approachability, and authenticity make her a special person and an author genuinely seeking to glorify God through her craft.

That said, I’d love to recommend her book 150 Quick Questions to Get Your Kids Talking as a companion for your dinner table. Her own introduction says it best:

“I’ve tried nearly every parenting method on the market. Sometimes I’ve felt elated that I’ve nurtured my children the way God wanted me to. Other times I’ve worried that I didn’t discipline correctly. I’ve been stern. I’ve been lax. I’ve wavered. I’ve showered with love. But none of those methods captured my children’s hearts quite so much as something I’ll call conversational parenting–the kind of parenting that requires engagement and discourse.” [pg.7]

Haven’t we all had that feeling of floundering through this journey called parenting? Feeling that at times we hit the mark with grace and poise, while others moments are a pathetic and discouraging miss. For those less-than-perfect episodes, Mary encourages us not to foresake the task but to walk with our kids and engage them with peripateo parenting [check that out on pg. 11].

The book is small in size and divided into ten chapters, each with fifteen questions. Each chapter begins with a vignette and Mary’s own thoughts to stimulate application in your own life. Questions posed fall under topics such as: aspirations, describe, actions and choices, philosophical questions, and “if”.

Published by Harvest House, this book seems best suited to families with elementary-aged kids and older. If you’ve been looking for a way to connect more deeply with your family, reach for this book and get comfortable. You might find your mealtime lasting long into the evening, hearts opening wide, and connections growing deep.

Other Ideas for Using this Book:

  • Grandkids, ask your grandparents some of these questions!
  • Homeschoolers: journal prompts and early-finishers tasks
  • Toss a copy in your purse for your next road trip!
  • Youth group leaders/Sunday School Teachers: engage your students with these questions before/after class rather than idleness and empty chatter [not that all teachers allow for empty chatter...please don't assume the worst of me here]
  • Small group potlucks…copy and cut into squares [Mary's original format] and add them to the bread basket!
  • Leave a copy of 150 Quick Questions in your break room at work
  • Donate a copy to your child’s school for the teacher lunch room…maybe some of these questions will make their way into the classroom!

 

How do you encourage meaningful conversation at home?

 

 

Table Rewards

Last week I shared our family’s method of teaching and reinforcing good table manners with our placemat and report kit [which you can order HERE]. We’ve been using this system for nearly two months now and our kids have been very motivated to do well, earn their “stars,” and accumulate points. At the moment they’re working together to save up for a whole-family reward rather than turning in their points separately [we'll see if that lasts amidst so many temptations!]

I thought it might be helpful for you to see what kind of rewards we have up for grabs. We sat down with our kids and brainstormed some ideas together to make sure the things on the list would be appealing to them. My husband and I attached the points based on what we thought was appropriate, but obviously there’s a lot of room for latitude and preference here [remember that our system allows for earning a possible 30 points per dinner].

You’ll notice that some of our rewards are location-specific, so just making a copy of my sheet probably won’t help your family…although you’re welcome to do so if you happen to be near me!

download or view my reward list

Points are collected by using a paper “reward jar” [see below]. We write the names of each of our kids in each section of the jar and list their nightly star totals underneath, creating a “bank” of points. Using a Vis-A-Vis marker allows you record AND erase points in each kids’ section IF the paper is laminated or affixed to the fridge with clear contact paper [HINT: if you cut the contact paper slightly larger than the paper it sticks it to your fridge door AND allows for easy erasing].

download or view my 3-kid Reward Jar

If you’re so busy you think your calendar might implode and would like me to design your reward list or jar, please visit my Etsy store!

Do you use rewards with your kids? What motivates the little ones in your home?

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