12 July 2009

The Way They Were~

... when we returned to Niger, the beginning of this term.

The Way They Are Now~

...as we prepare to return to the States for a year of Home Assignment.

I can't even begin to think about the upcoming time when this one has become "The Way They Were" photo... or the tears begin to well up in my eyes... It probably doesn't help that I've been listening to (in my mind, of course) the following song all day as I've been plotting posting these photos.

Memories
Like the corners of my mind
Misty water-colored memories
Of the way we were
Scattered pictures,
Of the smiles we left behind
Smiles we gave to one another
For the way we were
Can it be that it was all so simple then?
Or has time re-written every line?
If we had the chance to do it all again
Tell me, would we? could we?
Memories, may be beautiful and yet
What's too painful to remember
We simply choose to forget
So it's the laughter
We will remember
Whenever we remember...
The way we were...

11 July 2009

What in the World's "Goatin' On" Around Here? ...the rest of the story ~

Last week, I posted this... with a promise to tell the story behind the photo later. It has been an incredibly BUSY several days, but thought I'd better keep my word before Tim suspends our internet connection... We are outta here in only THREE MORE "GET-UPS!" (that's how the girls count down days).

And now, without further ado, here's what was "goatin' on" when Rebekah snapped her photo...

Boomerang (or Boomer for short), the goat, was given to us as a gift in honor of Mary Michelle's arrival... and Boomer (a she, I think... I didn't actually investigate) proved to be an entertaining addition to our menagerie.

If one of the kiddos disappeared from inside the house, said child was usually outside the house, observing the goings-on among all the critters living in our courtyard.

Boomer was taken from her mama (which, I'm told, both highly protested) and after arriving chez nous, latched on to our bunny ("Menthe") as her foster mama. If the bunny left the cage, the goat started crying and screaming until the bunny came back.

If the chickens harrassed the bunny too much at feeding time, Boomer transformed into a "bunny protector," making sure s/he (again, I've not investigated) had a fair share of the "yum-yum."

And then one day, a peacock decided to come for a visit. Finding out that Nigeriens like to keep peacocks was a bit of a shock. Tim says they eat them - as they aren't a whole lot different than an overgrown, fancy-tailed chicken; but I think it is more of a status thing to have such a fancy bird, and relatively, birds don't eat much. The first time we knew of these birds visiting our yard, I was terrified. One of our neighbors actually had a pair and they landed on the roof of our home early (right-after-morning-prayers-early) one morning. It woke me up and I literally thought that 1) We were having a coup d'état and I'd heard the first munition firing, or 2) the huge tree right outside our house had fallen on the roof which was now collapsing in on top of us. They literally made that.much.noise just landing and walking around. For what it's worth, tin roofs do tend to be noiser than cement ones ~ thus it also took me a long time to get used to the sound of lizards scurrying across the metal.

Boomer, apparently, wasn't any more impressed with marauding peacocks than I had been, especially not if they were bugging his/her little white bunny foster "mama." Boomer went on the offense! And, if you want to know how hard headed our little goat is, just ask Elsie Mae. She came stumbling into the house crying one afternoon, covered with sand and bad-mouthing the goat. It wasn't too clear exactly what she was saying... 2 year olds are difficult to understand sometimes, especially when they are upset, but I did catch the word goat several times. After the older siblings meandered into the house to check on Elsie's status, I got the rest of that story: Elsie was eating a cinnamon roll or something which the goat decided she wanted and so took it from her. Not appreciating that, Elsie retaliated. The goat respondedwith a head-butt to Elsie's posterior, which knocked her right over, face first into the sand. I so wish I had a video of those few minutes, but alas... I don't.

The peacock didn't appreciate being on the receiving end of our head-strong Boomer's focused attention, either. It hightailed it (I don't mean that literally... he actually tucked his tail while he was on the run.) out of the courtyard pretty quickly after the above "encounter."

10 July 2009

Blast from the Past - Ougadougou, April, 2002

I've been feeling nostalgic lately... so thought I'd post some photos from way back when... from our first full year living in West Africa. Boy, have lots of things changed.

We've doubled the number of kids in our family since this picture was taken...

A favorite part of our 4 day get-away to Ouaga was the plethora of pools... we were at a different pool almost every day. Wasn't Nadia a sweetie?

There was a large park in the middle of town with trails to wander. The kids loved this... and enjoyed trying to spot authentic African wildlife. If I remember correctly, we saw huge vultures, lots of smaller birds, peacocks, snakes, bats and a monitor lizard that was almost as big as Rebekah. I KNOW that because Rebekah chased after the crazy thing in true Crocodile Hunter fashion, and might have caught the thing if she hadn't actually listened when we called her back.

As you can see... a "forest" in the Sahel looks quite a bit different than one in North America. Flamboyant trees, however are one of my favorites. I just recently heard someone say that when the flamboyant blooms, the expat wilts... because it flowers during the hottest part of the year.

"Da boyz..." Only two of them at that time. ;-)

When Anna was just a pipsqueak, she was a ball maniac. She loved playing with balls and I've always sort of figured she'd be my athletic one.

Anna spent many minutes trying to figure out how to get the basketball into the hoop... waiting patiently for a boost from her daddy was her most effective "play."

Another highlight of our time in Ouaga was a sort-of amusement park named Fasso Park. It was just perfect for our then-little-tykes, and there were no lines or long waits ~ unless you counted the time you had to wait for the ride operators to walk over to the ride from whichever of the two shady spot they'd chosen in which to camp out while waiting for customers.

There were several merry-go-round type rides...

...bumper boats...

(I don't think this would "float" in the States... no life jackets and both girls were shorter than the mandatory size marked on the ride entrance, but hey... this is Africa, right?)

My favorite ride is always a genuine merry-go-round... and here we have photographic documentation of Nadia's first time behind the wheel...

And then there was the playground... The elephant slide was the absolute most memorable moment of our trip to Ouaga.

Anna loved it and so she slid once...

...and again...

and again... Have you noticed why it was so memorable?

Move over Miss Frizzle and Magic School bus... our kids investigated the digestive tract of an African elephant by sliding right on through!

04 July 2009

What in the World's "Goatin' On" Around Here?

I want to hear what you think is the story behind this picture... and I'll be sure to tell you what really happened in a few days!

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VOILÀ!!

Discovering Your Child's Design, Part 5

After "analyzing" the metaphor or model of parents as architects, Ralph Mattson and Thom Black, the authors of Discovering Your Child's Design (a thought-provoking-for-me book I recently finished reading), introduce a different model in one of the last chapters, "Looking Toward Harvest," of their book. (pp. 194-197)

"...Consider the image of parents as farmers. The farmer does not treat peaches like apples, nor cauliflower like pole beans. True, they all need the same basics -- sunlight, good soil, fertilizer, water and weeding. But they need differing degrees of each ingredient and different proportions of minerals in the fertilizer.

Though there is a basic collectioon of tools and machines used for all these crops, there are particular tools used ony on certain crops. Above all, the farmer remains aware that he only nurtures what God is creating each day as the crops germinate, grow, flower and eventually bear fruit. The farmer is very active, but at the same time he is also the observer of what God is doing. He is in partnership with God.

The idea of partnership in farming is a strong one. We realized that not much will happen if the farmer doesn't throw himself wholeheartedly into bringing crops to fruition. That's his responsiblity, and all his efforts lead to a productive harvest. But it is equally true that nothing happens at all if God doesn't do His part. The farmer works with an absolute dependance on God to provide sun and rain. Even the farmer who does not believe in God knows, too well, the limitation of his powers.

The active farmer wants pears to be pears, spinach to be spinach, avocados to be avocados, and peas to be peas. He rejoices in the identity of what is planted and does everything to nurture each crop according to its own nature. How silly it would be if a farmer with a magnificent apple orchard decided that he wanted pears instead. He could experiment with different fertilizers, prune differently, change the amount of water or put different lables on teh trees, but all he is going to get are apples. Taken to the expreme, this farmer's misguided efforts could even destory the conditioon in which apples flourish, and he could end up with trees that bear neither pears nor apples. All his hard work would be for nothing.

Whilel farmers are highly active in the nurturing of their crops, they must also learn to yield to circumstances over which they have no control. In the full knoledge of god's splendid grace, they must sometimes face the inexplicable. They watch as seeds that were carefully planted with excitement and hope are washed away by floods. They see a promising, vigorous crop destroyed slowly and surely by drought. During many of these times, all they can do is passivley observe....

God invented parenthood. It was His idea that new personalities be brought into being through our participation as parents. We are engaged to a God who determned that children be conceived in the midst of passion. It should not surprise us to realie that, with more intensity than we can ever know, God's passion for us presses us from all sides. He is for us. He is for each of our children. He is champion of their lives, their years, their health, their calling, their eternal destiny...

It may be your purpose to help your child see the nature of God. But if you look closely enough, don't be surprised if you soon find that y our are seeing God through the nature of your child...."

------------------------------
Excerpt from the book Discovering Your Child's Design by Ralph Mattson and Thom Black.

03 July 2009

Discovering Your Child's Design, Part 4

For my last two posts regarding this book (which I need to finish up so I can lend it to a friend who's waiting to read it), I'd like to highlight an analogy the authors used, which gave me words to describe how I feel I parent best...

"...popular Christian culture may tend to place greater responsibilities upon parents than they are meant to bear. To illustrate this, we should consider the common view of parents as architects. Well-meaning parents, attempting to follow the commands of Scripture, sometimes become overly zealous architects of their child's design.

The parent as architect is not difficult to describe. Such parents believe that they will be totally responsible for what the child eventually becomes. The architect parent goes to a mental drawing board and designs the child from beginning to end. The design is usually so complete that it embraces all aspects of the child's life. Even physical appearance, over which the parent has no control, is addressed in terms of how the child's looks wil be packaged and presented.

Regardless of whether the architect parents are blue-collar workers or university graduates, they will develop a clear image of the "package" that they expect their child to become. Architect parents are careful about the toys they buy -- whether plastic guns and commando troops or the latest thing in developmental toys. They know that these toys will influence the minds of the child who plays with them. Some architect parents are deliberate in teaching their kids to be peacemakers and avoid fighting at all costs. Others encourage their kids to protect their rights.

Architect parents are also careful about what their children are exposed to. Some steer children towards books and ballet, others to guns and fishing rods. In either case, the parents are careful to indoctrinate their children into a particular value system. They make sure the children play with the right playmates and socialize with what the family thinks are their kind of people.

When a child of architect parents grows up, the parents still have clear expectations of what that individual should do with his or her life.... Whatever the parent's intent might be, the child knows precisely what is expected and will experience extraordinary guilt if he pursues any other path. After all, it is the architect who really knows the total design. Whenever architect parents are also Christians, they often justify their intentions with spiritual or biblical principles.

Some architect parents act the way they do because it fits the way they are designed. They simply do what comes naturally, and it is natural for them to want to control other people's lives. Other architect parents do what they do because they believe it's what good parents ought to do.... Of course this portrayal of architect parents is a sterotype. Yet sometimes it takes an overstatement to help us to identify a well-disguised problem. The mind-set of the architect parents is supported to a great degree by the training processes of the church...

The sterotype of an ideal child is one who is quiet, responsible, loving to brothers and sisters, clean, neat, always on time, faithful in completing homework assignments, creative in play, fair in sports, interested in academic study and in sermons, a good eater, repsonsible, and so forth. These expectations are based on common sense and conformity. None are unreasonable for people who have to live together with some degree of tranquility. Yet it is unrealistic for parents to expect children to display all of these characteristics all the time.

It is dangerous to have our children conform to every whim imposed on them. It causes them to become indecisive and spiritually weak, substituting a legalistic awareness of God for an enthusiastic knowledge of their Creator. They are driven to become right rather than holy. Holiness is never achieved by adherence to models or rules. Rather, the Holy Spirit brings it about through an intimate relationship. In this way, holiness is a state of being in God and behaving accordingly. Biblically, is should be the norm for all Christians, not just a selected few superspiritual people.

Many Christians have a misconception of what holiness should be. Very few see it as a matter of beautiful actions and relationships emerging out of an enthusiasm for serving God, displayed in day-to-day living. The reason for the misperception is that holiness has traditionally been taught be presenting a perfect model and pointing out our own shortcomings. But teaching holiness should be a matter of nurturing a unique relationship with God....

Your child may be nothing like what you desire or expect. That's OK. God has a very good reason for creating him in such a way. And unlike an architect building a structure, you won't be able to stop the process and adjust the shape or color anytime you want to. You need to take a different approach as a parent, one that allows God to bring about unique results beyond anything you might have envisioned..."

I'm still mulling over much of this... There are many things in the above excerpt that resonate deeply within... maybe partly because of how God designed me as a parent, and the realization that I fall so short of the parenting standards with which I began parenting - things I'd learned from my own upbringing, watching other parents, heard and learned in Christian circles as well as academic ones... I've highlighted in a different color the parts on which I'm particularly "chewing..." I'd love to hear what you think.

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Excerpted from Discovering Your Child's Design, by Ralph Mattson and Thom Black, pp. 189-194.

"~Fly Like an Eagle~"

or...

"Another Post About
What Happens When
the Kids Take Off
With the Camera!"

The week before we moved out of the house, our kids "camped out" in the living room, sleeping on their mattresses in one never-ending slumber party. They also concocted some pretty fun ideas. In these photos, Rebekah would lay on her back and Brendan would run and jump (or dive) over her onto the mattresses and she'd snap a photo of him as he flew across. Their goal was to have the eagle on his t-shirt more or less in focus... I'm going to need to get them to give me photography lessons on how to use my camera. She did mention that it was difficult to make sure he actually ended up in the picture... a fact which was proven by the numerous photos I deleted of nothing but the ceiling and the fan.
Even Jonathan got in on the action.
I think they had fun.
How about you?

02 July 2009

Discovering Your Child's Design, Part 3

Voilà... After a "Wordless Wednesday" (i.e. you notice I didn't post anything other than pics of the little peanut yesterday), here's another excerpt from the book Discovering Your Child's Design by Ralph Mattson and Thom Black.

"...While it is assumed that children will be exposed to formal worship in church settings, this is another area where the design of your child is very important. The better you know him, the better you can anticipate how he will respond to the church experience. With a little foresight you can provide the right buffers for the aspects of adult worship which are tedious for hte child.

But more importantly, you need to be aware of antoher level of worship which is informal and very personal. Because of our unique capacities, each of us has a very specific ability to appreciate a particular aspect of Good. In addition, we each tend to relate to other personalities in our own distinctive style. These two factors rpovide a script for the kind of communication possible between yourself and God.

People first need to see how God reveals Himself in their lives. Then they need to find the most natural way of responding that holds their enthusiasm. This type of communication with God can begin early in life. Parents should use their spiritual intuition in figuring out how to encourage personal worship, given the unique nature of their own child.

the parent's goal should be for chldren to experience God in an intimate way, remembering that God has an even strner interest in such relationships then we do. Parents need to expect that God will enter into such situations. Such faith is not only a benefit for the parents involved, but also a model for the children. This model of faith may be the base that the child builds on as he or she matures into a caring, worshipful individual." (p. 188)

I'd never thought about this before... that we each have particular aspects and styles of worship that draw us naturally because God "wired" us that way... and that is part of God's thumbprint on our lives. But it does make sense. I'm a "words" person - so while I enjoy listening to music and worshipping the Lord through song, it doesn't speak to my heart the way reading devotional literature, rewriting and personalize Scripture or reading certain inspiratinal/devotional blogs does. And the best thing is that it isn't a matter of right or wrong, but rather how God created us... and He enjoyes our particular peculiarities because He made us that way.

When I look at that as a parent, what a joy and delight it is to try and figure out those particular peculiarities of our children... and as we do, to see God through their eyes and learn things about Him we might never see ourselves. It is also privilege and a great responsiblity to realize that I am in such a unique position to help my child learn how to love and appreciate His maker and His Savior.

Banana Pudding... Niger Style

Banana Pudding has been a favorite dessert of mine since... well, probably since forever. That and apple pie and anything with raspberries. I knew when we first started preparing to come to Niger, that I'd be cooking much more from scratch (and even took time to learn how BEFORE I got here), but I don't think I understood exactly what that meant until I'd lived here for a bit. I don't can't just run to the store and pick up a few boxes of instant pudding, vanilla wafers and cool whip to make banana pudding, like I had learned. So... here's how I do so... here...

First, there is vanilla pudding to make~

  • 5 T cornstarch
  • 1/3 C sugar
  • 1/4 tsp salt
  • 2/3 C milk powder
  • 1 3/4 C water
  • 1 egg
  • 2 T sugar
  • 1 T butter
  • 2 tsp vanilla

Combine dry ingredients together in a saucepan; add water and mix thoroughly. Cook until thinckened, stirring constantly. Separately, beat egg slightly then stir in sugar. Pour a little hot mixture over egg and then return to pan. Simmer about 5 minutes, stirring constantly to prevent scorching. Add butter then remove from heat. Add vanilla and cool.

Note: for a fluffier pudding, spearate egg white, beat and add when pudding has cooled a bit.

I triple this when I'm making it for the family. =D

Then, we make the vanilla wafers~

  • 1/3 C butter
  • 1/2 C sugar
  • 1 egg
  • 1 tsp milk
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1 C flour
  • 1 tsp baking powder

Preheat oven to 400°. Cream together the butter, sugar, egg, milk and vanilla. Add the flour and baking powder and mix well. Form into round balls about 1 inch in diameter and place on an ungreased baking sheet. Bake at 400° for 8-10 minutes.

I also triple this recipe.

To actually assemble the banana pudding...

The morning of the day we are going to eat it (unless there is a strike or rioting going on in the city) I head in to the market to buy 3-4 kg of bananas, depending on how they look. I always have to have extras because the kids devour them and I want to make sure there are enough left over for the actual pudding.

Once safely home again, I mix up about 3 cups of whipping creme with sugar and fold that into the already chilled vanilla pudding.

Jonathan and Elsie Mae love to help with the next part. We put a layer of vanilla wafers on the bottom of the serving dish, peel and slice a thick layer of bananas, layer the puddng/whipping creme mix on top of that, use the remaining vanilla wafers to line around the side after crumbling a few to spread around the top...

There are other presentations of banana pudding that I prefer... but this is the kiddos' favorite, so for now, we stick with this...

And here is how it normally turns out... and it doesn't look like this for long unless I keep an armed, well-paid and well-trained guard responsible for it. Otherwise, little fingers (and not so little ones from the kiddos' daddy) are known to find their way in for a pre-taste!

30 June 2009

Discovering Your Child's Design, Part 2

Today, I'd like to share a little more from the book I started writing about yesterday, Discovering Your Child's Design by Ralph Mattson and Thom Black. In this book, the authors encourage parents to not only teach and train their children according to biblical principals, but also to help their children mature into the persons God created and gifted them to be. As each child is an unique individual, parents must carefully observe and carefully listen to their children, all the while paying close attention to consistencies in their choices, preferred modes of operation, and likes and dislikes to determine what the authors call a "distinctive operating style." Parents should be asking questions such as:
  1. Is your child pushed or pulled into action?
  2. What specifically pushes or pulls your child?
  3. How much time does your child use?
  4. To what kind of environment is your child drawn?
  5. What does your child like to encounter? (i.e. problems to solve, risky situations, ignorance so s/he can supply information, disorder to organize, an opponent, a potential audience, supporters or allies...),
  6. What capabilities does your child consistently use?

Parents are given numerous ideas of other questions to ask as they seek to discover their children's distinctive operating styles. All behavior is organized into either one or some combination of the following activities:
  1. utilitarian (doing what you have to do),
  2. developmental (doing something to improve yourself or help yourself to grow),
  3. relational (doing for someone else) and
  4. expressive (doing what you want to do).

I think the one part of the book that I've most appreciated was reading through their treatment of utilitarian behavior.

"Many necessary activities adults take for granted are still major challenges for children. We all go through our day-to-day routines at home, school, or work. As we do, we like to do certain tasks and are indifferent to others. But we have learned that some things simply need to be done regardless of whether or not we enjoy them.

Young children, however, go through the routines of their day with a different attitude. They need to play and to eat. But more than that, they need to gain the sense of security that comes through their daily routine of playtimes and mealtimes. Adults have developed a sense of continuity and have no fears about their daily schedules. They can anticipate what is going to happen based on their sense of history. Young children aren't yet able to do so.

In addition to lacking the assurance of daily routine, very young children also lack the motor skills necessary to accomplish things which to adults are simple tasks. So now we have two factors to remember about utilitarian tasks for small children. Botoh factors will dominate their behavior, as you will learn quickly from observation.

And as the child grows older, a third factor will start to show up. A distinctive operating style will start to manifest itself as the child begins to not only accomplish tasks, but to accomplish them in a particular way. As the child grows, he or she will welcome some tasks and avoid others, if possible. This will continue to increase during the child's growth until a full operating style will be clearly in evidence.

If dishwashing is the required (utilitarian) activity, one child will stack all the dishes of the same size together, collect all the forks, spoons, and knives into separate piles, and wash each group before going to the next. In contrast, another child will fill the sink and submerge everything into the soapy suds before washing a thing. Knowing this, it isn't hard to guess which child can't stand having the black checkers mixed with the red checkers in the storage box or goes into a tirade every time he discovers streaks of jam in the peanut butter jar. Nor it is difficult to guess whose closet is in perpetual chaos.

The parent supervising the dishwashing also has a distinctive operating style. The natural tendancy is to approve of one or the other dishwashing methods accordingly. But the motto of the wise parent will be, 'When it comes to dishwashing, who cares how it's done as long as it's done.' A parent who is a hands-on manager or likes to do everything in an exact sequence of steps may have difficulty accepting this idea. But its acceptance will save a lot of misunderstanding.

Such a 'manager' parent may have been given, as a gift of God's grace, a son who is highly innovative or even creative. The parent, in an attempt to teach the boy responsibility, may assign him the chore of taking out the garbage each night. The son, because of his design, will probably carry the garbage one night, use a wheelbarrow another night, and ride it down to the curb on his skateboard the next night. The down-to-business parent may not appreciate such diversity, especially all the 'wasted' energy. But what difference does it make as long as the job is consistently being (well) done? The child's variety in technique should not prevent the parent from expressing appreciation for faithful performance.

Each person has different standards when it comes to neatness.... We all know families surrounded by permanent mess and other families where everything has its place. Each family should have the liberty to decide what degree of order makes sense for their situation. The decision usually comes from the operating style of the leading decider, and may or may not clash with the operating styles of others in the family.

An essential responsibility of leadership is to put aside one's personal operating style for the sake of the people being managed. This is true whether you are leading employees or children. When you find yourself in the position of leadership, you should objectively evaluate whether the necessary tasks have to be done in a certain way. And you need to know why or why not.

Sometimes a job has to be done a specific way, and the child needs to be so advised. All children need to encounter the realities of authority and obedience. They need to learn that aside from what they or even their parents want to do, certain tasks must be completed in a particular sequence. They must support and adjust to certain givens in life....(but) this procedure works best when the child also has plenty of opportunity to do other things his way (according to his natural design) with some degree of frequency."

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From "The Stuff of Everyday Living," pp 127-132, Discovering Your Child's Design by Ralph Mattson and Thom Black.

Self-portraits

Downloading my camera is always discovery time, since a few "unnamed" children are known to abscond with said apparatus and take many photos of which I am unaware. Maybe that is slack parenting... not being sufficiently aware of what my kiddos are up to, but then again, I try not to micromanage the oldest two in their daily tasks and responsibilities.

So, I downloaded the camera the other night... 468 photos and videos... Maybe that doesn't seem like a huge number to some of you (right, Gampie?), but I don't know that I've ever had that many photos stored on my camera ~ it is still a relatively new-to-me device and I'm enjoying learning how to use it.

After I downloaded those 468 photos, I scanned through the pics, and several surprised me...

Like this one. Our little peanut is growing and changing fast, but I really didn't think Mary Michelle was old enough to start in on the self portraiture... yet...

However, after discovering these two photos, I was beginning to wonder???

Until a few photos later, the mystery was solved. And I really should have known, since Rebekah is the most likely culprit when my camera goes mysteriously missing.

Sisters! Aren't they sweet?

This last photo is my favorite... I love how the flash so perfectly caught their eyes... no wonder one of our friends only ever calls Rebekah "Blue eyes."

...makes me think of the old Elton John song from high school days (I think??)...

Blue eyes
Baby's got blue eyes
Like a deep blue sea
On a blue blue day

29 June 2009

Discovering Your Child's Design, Part 1

I just finished reading a really good book on parenting. It isn't one I'd heard of before (you can pick up some pretty amazing and interesting stuff at garage sales in an expat community), but the general idea of the book wasn't revolutionary or even new-to-me, but I appreciated the reminder, once again.

The first time I heard some of these ideas was at Brendan's baby shower, before he actually arrived, nearly 14 years ago. The devotional was given by a dear friend and fellow missionary, a lady whom I admire greatly and for whom I am so thankful. She challenged all of us, but especially me, that our job as parents is to train up a child in the way that he should go... and that isn't necessarily the way I think he should go, but rather the way that God created him to be... if that makes sense. That was the beginning of a shattering of any illusion that I'd be able to find a perfect parenting formula and then simply follow that pattern with simple modifications for each child to find that... "Voilà! I've successfully raise godly kids!"

Parenting itself, as well as a recognition of all the times I blow it and fall so short of what I consider ideal (and that is so much less than what God expects) has shattered the any of those illusions that might have remained.

The book I've been reading, Discovering Your Child's Design, by Ralph Mattson and Thom Black, pursues further explanation and application of this same idea. Over the course of this next week or so, I'd like to share some excerpts from the book that I've particularly appreciated ~ and to hear some of your feedback, too.

We must see that God designed a unique personality and not an undefined hunk of clay to be shaped into what man wants... We must give up the idea of seeing children through rose-tinted glasses of: 1) What we want them to be; 2) What society expects of them; 3) Our measuring sticks; 4) Our categories, boxes, classifications, and groupings... Each child is designed and you can know something of that design.

...the heart is not a vague spiritual capacity tucked somewhere within us. It is the foundation of human personality from which all actions emerge. This heart has a shape, as design which can be described in great detail. In your child it can be described in enough detail to transform your understanding of who he or she is.

How glorious to realize that children are designed like jewels that bear the beauty of God intended from the very beginning of their creation. So does that mean we already have little doctors, plumbers, mathematicians, cabinet makers, and artists running around in our houses? Does that mean all we have to do now is feed and water these diminutive professionals to have themautomatically turn out to be whatever is already fixed in their makeup?

The answer is that God does not create doctors and plumbers. rather, He creates individuals who possess the gifts to become a doctor or a plumber. we, in turn, need to equip ourselves by acquiring the education and training necessary to become proficient in our designed areas. We are required to develop skills and acquire knowledge to match our gifts. Only after people have applied their God-given gifts towards their designed professions is it right to conclude that Godo has indeed given us those doctors and plumbers.

With this in mind, let us look at your child. If you have more than one child, keep in mind that each one is designed in a unique way. In this sinful world, we cannot actually see the designs of our children. Sometime, in a future kingdom, our spiritual sight will be restoreed. Then, as we look at our children as God designed them, we will be stunned to see what wondrous creations were running around our houses. Meanwhile, we do not have to proceed entirely by faith in this matter. There is much that you as a parent can do to be better informed about your child's design while you have the opportunity.

Evidence for your child's design is all about you....the real child begins to appear when you are able to get behind their actions to discover a common theme -- what we will call a motif.

A motif is a recurring salient element in a work of art. The first fact we discover here is that your child is a work of art. Physical appearance may or may not indicate outer beauty, but that is not especially important. Our real appearances are seen by Godo since He looks on the heart. Each child is created beautiful by God -- no matter what may ultimately happen to both exterior and inner beauty. Your child's beauty also has a salient element (a striking theme or an outstanding characteristic). This is further established by the next phrase of the definition.

A motif is a dominant idea or central theme. Your child is unique, like no other. His or her prominent qualities can be described and woven together to make up the essential characteristics (theme) of his or her life. These dominant qualities are authored by God. They embrace all the physical, emotional, spiritual, and psychological dimensions of our being.

A motif is a repeated design, an influence or stimulus prompting to action. Your child's design is not just a shape somewhere in the interior of the personality, but rather a motivation to action. It involves the heart, from which all actions emerge. The heart is the place of the will, the seat of intentionality. There is consistency to all that y our child does. Your child does certain things in ways that are unlike any other child.

...if you really want to see some of the God-given design of your child, you need to find a repeated theme that influences all of your child's actions and decisions.

I don't know about you, but I love watching and talking people (in general), and trying to figure out what makes the tick... it is even more exciting when the little people I'm watching are the special ones God has entrusted to me for this time... What a responsibility! What an opportunity! What a delight!

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Material quoted from the chapter entitled "Tools for Your Use" in the book Discovering Your Child's Design by Ralph Mattson and Thom Black.

"Pawdners..." (said with my best southern drawl)

~ which I really can do, since I grew up in Oklahoma and since my parents/ grandparents/etc., are all from S. Illinois... like as far south in the state of Illinois as you can go and have it still be considered Illinois... but that is all totally off the subject.

Since we first arrived in Niger, we've seen our team change... go from three families --- to only us... then start to grow again... we are still reeling a little from disappointment, as this spring/summer, we've seen God directing some of those partners to other teams and ministires... which makes us all the more thankful for those who are still here. Working in a place like Niger, while there is no other place we'd rather be, is hard in many ways. I can't pick up the phone and call my mom or sister... letters and emails often disappear into cyberspace and responses never come because life is just so busy... I blog, which I love and which helps others feel like they know us a little, know our kids - but "feedback" and reciprocity is more unlikely than common. Facebook is fun, and it is amazing the little pieces of daily life to which you have access... that I've never had before. I don't want it to sound like I'm complaining because I'm not. When we told God, "Yes," this was all part of the counted cost. But it does make me sad.

And reality is - those people who are here, doing similar things to what we are doing, leaving and living elsewhere - whether a part of our particular organization or not - DO become family. So while we anticipate many wonderful hellos and so-DELIGHTED-to-see-yous in just a few weeks, it is a bit bittersweet because it also signifies many sad and difficult goodbyes to those we love here. I know it is hard for me... I think it is even harder for our kids.

See? It is making Anna act just a little wierd! *smile*

These photos were taken back in May, at a picnic with the Sahel Academy dorm family. Our colleagues, Tim and Janice Phillips are the dorm parents. They've been in Niger for a little over a year now, and they are a part of our missionary family. Although their ministry does not center on Nigeriens, what they do makes it possible for many other missionary families (from all over W. Africa) to continue to live, work, minister and live out God's calling on their lives.

This afternoon, we ate pig roasted in a barbecue pit, ate yummy salads and desserts (like homemade banana pudding... totally from scratch - even the vanilla wafers - which, by the way, can't be beat!). The kids swam in the river (that's why they look so icky and grimey), enjoyed the flame of a campfire (even though it was well over 100' ~ we missos are a strange lot, sometimes), sat and visited under the shade of luscious mango trees, spent some time singing, praising and worshipping the Lord and were encouraged by the example of Esther in the Bible as she faced upcoming changes and unknowns in her life.

Even with all the hard and heartbreaking twists of this path along which God is leading us, I don't think we'd change a thing... unless it would be to trust Him more completely, to believe Him always... to truly taste and see that He is good.

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