I’m Over On Raising Homemakers Today!

Are you exhausted teaching your children the same lessons over and over?  Me too!!!  Come visit me over on Raising Homemakers today where I share a few lessons I’ve learned from these motherhood struggles.

Raising Homemakers
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Are You Exhausted Teaching Your Children the Same Lessons Over and Over and Over?


There are times in motherhood where I have been both frustrated and baffled. Frustrated because I am disciplining my child for the same thing over and over and over and over and baffled because I am consistently giving consequences over and over and over and they are not changing.

I remember when my son was around 3 and we would go places. He would inevitably do something aggressive which would shock me as much as the other moms watching! I would discipline him and watch for those same behaviors at home to be sure to work on them in privacy. But it seemed inevitable, the next time we were in a social setting he would do it again.

By the age of 4, I was exhausted with dealing with the same behaviors he was displaying at 3. He was beginning to be labeled by the behavior and it was deeply concerning.

I remember receiving the same advice from multiple sources – “be consistent”. The baffling part – I was being very consistent - and I had a child who was being equally consistent in his misbehavior.
4 years later and my son is now 7 and though he still makes spontaneous decisions without thinking that lead him to trouble, I do see progress. What a relief to see progress – but we aren’t out of the woods yet!!! A wise woman once told me “Courtney, work on progress not perfection.”
Some personalities are bent in a direction that are harder to straighten than others. Some misbehavior is very obvious while others can be more sneaky. Multiple times (and this is embarrassing to admit) I have disciplined my son because another person reported of his misbehavior, only to learn later that the other child had done something sneaky that no one else saw.
So this brings me to the point of the above story. Today is Polished Cornerstones day over at Raising Homemakers and my daughter and I attempted to complete a new assignment from page 300 (here’s us working on the assignment over breakfast).
We had missionary guests staying with us all weekend and so before the family arrived I went over with my daughter ways that she could be hospitable to the little girls that would be staying with us. She made a list of activities she could invite the other girls to do in our home.


The list was made, the house prepared, the missionaries arrived and my daughter went into a funk. Let’s just say that nothing we had planned for her to do happened. If you follow my blog – you might remember that we had something similar happen once before on a Polished Cornerstones assignment.

And so this means we must try again another time. In training my children over and over and over and over I have learned a few good lessons as a mother:
1. Galatians 6:7 says “A man reaps what he sows.” I must continue to sow seeds of righteousness because in “due time I will reap a harvest IF I do not give up” (Gal. 6:9).
2. Persevere. Training a child up in the ways of the Lord is not for the weary at heart! Persevere!
3. Be humble. My children keep me humble. You can lead a horse to the water but you can’t make him drink. Just when my children couldn’t make me any prouder – they go and act their age and embarrass me! My prayer life has grown as God daily humbles me and keeps me on my knees. It is very clear when they do what is right that God deserves all the glory.
4. Be patient. I try to remember when I am frustrated that my daughter has only been on this earth 5 years. She is still learning and growing. I expect to see bits of maturity over time rather than an overnight morphing of a butterfly! By God’s grace, by the time we double her age to 10, I know I will see some fruit of my labor now. Be patient.
5. Remember that God gave Adam and Eve a perfect environment and even they made the wrong choices. We can do much right as a parent and our children still make wrong choices.
So dear Christian sister and friend, if you are weary from teaching your children the same lessons over and over and over and over - you are not alone! ME TOO!!! We are in it together – DO NOT GIVE UP!
This is my life verse – Galatians 6:9 “Do not grow weary in doing good, for in due season you will reap a harvest IF you do not give up.”

Walk with the King!

I am linked up here today:

works for me wednesday at we are that family

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Vlog: Teaching Our Children About Friendships

I originally made this video with plans to run it on a Friday – but it’s Wednesday! So up it goes and I’m sorry for mentioning the wrong day on the video! (and the freeze frame of me below is even funnier than my mess up on the days lol!!!)

Deuteronomy 6 says that parents are to teach our children along the way of life, the truth of God’s word. Sometimes we will be in formal settings reading God’s word to our children. But other times there will be opportunities just in the normal course of the day, to speak God’s truth. So here’s how to turn cooking a spaghetti dinner into an illustration for our children on friendships.

Walk with the King!
I am linked up here today:
works for me wednesday at we are that family

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Becoming a Domestic Artist

In The Hidden Art of Homemaking Edith Shaeffer says “I believe there is both an art form and a way of life, an atmosphere and a form of showing consideration, as well as a subtle way of providing education and inspiration in artistic areas that is being lost altogether if the meal table always has a bare center – or a bottle of milk and a jar of pickles.”
I agree. There is much a woman can to do set the atmosphere and tone of the home. Some of those things are done with her tongue:

1. Words of gentleness and kindness
2. Words of praise and affirmation
3. Words of grace and forgiveness
4. Words of truth and wisdom
5. Words of faith and hope
6. Words of gratitude and joy
But then there are physical things we can do to set the tone in our home:

1. Turn on soft music
2. Light a candle
3. Bake cookies
4. Place fresh flowers on the dinner table.

As Alexis grows and becomes a domestic artist, it is my job to train her in the arts. The hard part is that I feel like I am still learning myself – and so we are truly learning together on this journey!

On page 344 of Polished Cornerstones, it suggests that I have my daughter “Pick a bouquet for the dinner table or make an interesting centerpiece with other materials such as shells, dried flowers, candles etc.”
So we read some of Proverbs 31 together, discussed the virtuous woman and her influence on the home. We looked at her industrious ways such as her sewing her tapestries and beddings. Then Alexis went outside and made our family a beautiful centerpiece. We have been enjoying it for over 5 days now! She is seeing what a large influence she can have on the entire family and the praise she receives for blessing us in this way.

Monday, I encouraged women to be mindful of their husbands at the dinner table - but Edith Shaeffer reminds moms to be mindful of their children also,

“Instead of saying “Oh it doesn’t matter, it’s only the children”, when you are alone with children for a meal, it is important to say the opposite to yourself. “I wonder what the children would enjoy the most? Being surprised by something special on the table – a mirror with that new toy duck on it, and some stones around the edge, so that it looks like a pond, lighted by candles in crystal candlesticks, …something that will look like lamps near the pond? Or would they rather have a choice since they are the ones to be considered tonight…shall we have the green cloth, or the pink?”
Moms, remember your influence. Simple macaroni and cheese can be made special with just a few fancy folded napkins and a centerpiece you have created. Role model and train your daughters to become like the Proverbs 31 woman, a domestic artist, to the glory of God.

Walk with the King!

works for me wednesday at we are that family

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