Chapter One
The Wind
Beneath Her Wings
or The Gum Beneath
Her Shoes?
* * *
Bonding with Your Daughter
for a Lifetime
It was subtle at first, like a gauze curtain between us, this
growing distance. Then one afternoon I looked at my beautiful
daughter, age thirteen, and her eyes darted away from
me, almost on instinct.
"What's wrong?" I asked her. "Why have you been so snippy
with me lately? Is it PMS? Something I've said?"
"Like you really care," she mumbled and sulked upstairs to
her bedroom.
The gauze between us transformed into a full-fledged brick
wall.
Well, not as long as I'm still the mother
, I thought to myself.
I would find a way to chisel through this hard silence.
I followed Rachel up the steps, then following some wacky
maternal impulse, I climbed into her bed, pulled her pink-and-silver
comforter up around my chin and declared, "I'm having
a tuck-in until you talk to me and tell me what's been bothering
you."
"What's a tuck-in?" she asked, her eyes wide.
"I'm going to stay tucked in your bed-for
days
if that's
what it takes-until we talk."
Slowly, she grinned, eventually succumbing to the undertow
of laughter. A good sign. Then in the midst of the laughter,
her voice suddenly broke, and she was crying.
Also a good sign. I love the line from the great mother-daughter
movie
Steel Magnolias:
"Laughter through tears is my
favorite emotion."
Gingerly, Rachel sat down beside me, pushed away a damp
strawberry blond curl from her cheek, and said, "Mom, look:
When you are traveling on the weekends and speaking at these
ladies' retreats, you are different when you come home. It's like
you're on a parade float, waving at us-like we are a crowd on
the sidelines. But you don't really see me; you don't
hear
me.
You just say what you have to say to sound like a good mother
and pretend you are interested. But you aren't really here. You
are somewhere else in your mind."
Ouch!
The truth hurts. Especially when it comes from your
pubescent offspring.
"Rachel," I said, sitting up in her bed, reaching out and
pulling her close to my heart, "you're right. I have to admit it
is so hard for me to transition from being a speaker at a retreat
and bonding with all these women who live miles away, and
then suddenly-
zap!
-get off the plane, and back into my role
here as wife and mom and homemaker. It's sort of like when
you go to church camp and it takes you a couple of days to get
used to being our kid again."
"I know," she said tearfully.
"But you know what?" I said. "I really miss you guys. No one
in the world is as important to me as you and your brothers and
your dad. This is where my real life begins and ends, right here,
in this house. All I love most lives under this roof. And my traveling
to minister, obviously, isn't working well if my first love-this
family-isn't feeling so loved after all. So we need to make
some changes around here."
"Like what?" she asked.
"Like, I'm going to cut my travel down to one weekend a
month until all of you kids are out of high school. And I'm not
going to travel in the summer at all, or between Thanksgiving and
New Year's. That will be Sacred Family Time. How's that sound?"
"Better."
"It sounds better to me too. I love you so much, Rachel Praise."
"I love you too, Mom," she said, smiling again. The bricks
were tumbling down; we could see each other clearly again. She
rose from the bed, tugged at the pillow behind me, and grinned.
"Now, would you get out of my bed?"
* * *
Life as a mother is nothing more than a series of moments with
our children, one after the other. It is not so important that we
do all these moments perfectly, because, in truth, we cannot.
And life itself is a poignant mixture of joy and woe, moments
of laughing aloud together at a movie, and moments of yelling
and slamming doors.
Most of us parents who have been at it awhile admit that
we mostly wing it from day to day. We are a learn-as-you-go lot.
And that is fine, because parenting is 99 percent instinct and
common sense as long as you throw in big hunks of love, affection,
prayer, discipline, and a willingness to yelp for help when
you are stuck.
What matters most is that we tend to our relationships with
our children, paying attention to them, remembering their
importance in the grand scheme of our life here on earth, and
into eternity. Not because some parenting book tells you it is
what you have to do to be a model citizen. But because loving
relationships in families are what make life on this planet rich
with meaning and joy. It is living as God designed us to live.
I see brilliant orange and golden yellow leaves, dripping
with fresh rain, outside my office window this morning.
Thanksgiving was just a few days ago. On that day of blessing,
I couldn't help thinking of the hilarious idiosyncrasies, the soap-opera-style
dramas, that go on behind the beautiful turkey and
dressing feasts across our nation. What leaves me stunned with
gratitude is not that families are so marvelous, but that
they are
such a mess
and-wonder of wonders-we still love, put up
with, and pray good things for one another! Perhaps the family
relationship most fraught with emotion is that special bond
(or sometimes brick wall) between mother and daughter.
Bonding Glue for the Two of You
When I chat with mothers of young daughters, one of the
most common fears they share is that the bond they feel with
their child now will somehow blow up and dissolve when their
daughter hits the stormy teenage years. Best-selling books with
titles like
When You and Your Mother Can't Be Friends
or the
infamous
Mommy Dearest
can make any woman feel uneasy
about what evils may lurk ahead for their relationship with
their daughter-beyond Pablum and puberty.
Certainly, the growing independence of the teen years poses
challenges, but these fears of mother-daughter relationships
inevitably going awry are simply unfounded. For example, in a
recent collaborative survey between
Ladies' Home Journal
and
Seventeen
magazine, there were surprising discoveries about
mothers and daughters, many of them incredibly reassuring.
According to the popular stereotype, you would assume mothers
and their teen daughters are locked in near-constant combat.
Good news: the reality is much more rosy. A whopping 95
percent of moms say they feel close to their daughters, with 42
percent claiming to be best friends. The daughters responded
similarly-the vast majority reporting that their mothers are
supportive and that they are true friends. In addition, most
mothers today (three out of four) feel they are much closer to
their daughters than they were to their mothers.
What to Do, What to Do?
Accepting that this mother-daughter friendship is based on
many good moments together through the years, what are the
ideal ways to spend quality time bonding with your daughter?
Well, here is where the moms and daughters had slightly different
opinions, according to the survey. Both enjoyed sitting
around and talking, going to lunch and a movie, and shopping
together. However, the moms were really big on "sitting and
talking" time, while not too surprisingly, the daughters enjoyed
shopping the most-especially if mom was footing the bill!
One of the things Rachel and I have enjoyed most together
through the years is occasionally watching a Girls Only Saturday
afternoon video, often accompanied by the weekly activity
of folding mounds of laundry. Though some of my classic
movies or musicals seemed a little old-fashioned to my daughter
at first, I good-naturedly ignored her, stuck in the video, and
smiled. "Just humor your old mother, okay?" (My favorite
movies to watch with girls ages eight to twelve are listed on the
next page.)
In spite of some of Rachel's initial protests to "old-timey
movies," she soon found herself as caught up in the story, the
costumes, and the music as I once was-and I've often caught
her watching again
My Fair Lady
or
Seven Brides for Seven
Brothers
or humming a singable tune in spite of herself.
A Long Line of Love
Although we love it when our daughters earn good grades
or show special talents, the majority of mothers, according to
this survey, are most proud of their daughters when they
observe them performing good deeds. This morning my daughter
was sifting through the mail and came across a letter from
World Vision, where we give a small monthly financial pledge
to help a young girl from El Salvador. (I always keep Damaris
Iveth's picture and letters on our fridge. Our family loves
watching her "grow up" through these yearly photos.)
"Mom," Rachel asked, "are we going to send Damaris something
special for Easter? We need to, you know." And my heart
warmed. So much of compassion is caught rather than taught,
and one way to build in bonding time with your daughter is to
be an example of kindness in your own world. She will take
note and will follow your lead.
For example, I have a special place in my heart for children
and have always enjoyed wee ones. To my delight, I've observed
how my own daughter automatically reaches out to young ones
with tenderness and warmth and ease. Rachel began babysitting
a young toddler and his baby twin siblings down the street,
starting from the time she was eleven years old-apprenticing
by working alongside the young mother, changing countless
preemie diapers and reading a stack of Dr. Suess books to the
big brother who hungered for special attention as well. This
Christmas Rachel also participated in a program at Wal-Mart
where several teens arrived early to take a young, underprivileged
child on a shopping spree. Later the teens decided on
their own to throw these same children a wonderful Christmas
party.
In thinking back at my own legacy of female benevolence,
I realize that my tender heart might have been born of nurture,
rather than nature, as well. My mother often invited a mentally
challenged, newly adopted little girl named Sunny in our home
for "special visits" to give the child's exhausted mother a much-needed
break. Mom always kept-and still does-a closet full
of toys for anyone who might visit and bring little ones with
them. She adored rocking the newborns in the church nursery,
and grew up watching her own mother, my "Nonnie," take
delight in caring for babies.
Nine Ways to Make
Your Daughter Feel Loved
Here are some other ways to build mother-daughter connections:
1.
Give her the gift of your presence.
Listen with focused
attention, look in her eyes, sit down, slow down. Touch her
in motherly ways: stroke her hair, rub her arm, hug her.
2.
Speak to her with respect and kindness.
If you are stuck
in a rut of being cranky with your kids, try the mental trick
of treating them like guests in your home for day. My
mom used to say, "Treat your guests like family, and your
family like guests."
3.
Encourage her efforts with enthusiasm.
Let her know
she has her own private cheerleader to count on at
home. Convey that it is her courage to
try
new things that
makes you most proud, whatever the results.
4.
Seek first to understand your daughter's point of view
-and
let her know you really hear her, before you express
your own opinion. This is one of most profound and helpful
"Habits of Highly Effective Families" as taught by
Stephen Covey. It is also one of the most challenging
habits to implement!
5.
Answer her honest questions with honest answers.
"Good question! I don't know, but I'll try to find out" is
always appropriate.
6.
Say yes whenever you possibly can.
Reserve no for when
it is necessary.
7.
Ask her opinion.
Girls love giving advice. Or even better
yet, share something you've learned
from her
. You can
almost see the self-esteem rising in a child's face when
you say something as simple as, "Come taste this soup,
would you, Babe? You are such a naturally good cook.
What do you think? More salt? More garlic?"
8.
Allow your daughter to feel
any feelings
she may have.
In fact, if there is such a thing as a functional family
(most of us can only hope for fairly functional)-the common
denominator is that all feelings are allowed and able
to be expressed. However, you do have to teach her ways
she can express those feelings, and ways she cannot,
without damaging relationships.
9.
Let her cry, and don't be afraid to cry with her too.
Part
of teaching empathy and tolerance is to allow for "the
crankies" in your family now and then. If it becomes
habitual, you'll have to take a different turn, but everyone
has bad days, and you will want her to be understanding
when you are frustrated with life too. Maybe you can have
a family Teddy Bear that is passed to the person most
in need of some extra love and cuddling on a particularly
trying day.
You will probably be surprised one day when you ask your
daughter what she remembers most about your times
together. Most often it isn't the grand, planned mother-daughter
occasions-but the small kindnesses, the little
notes on her pillow or in her lunch box, the "folding laundry
and watching a video" times of coziness and warmth
and fun that bind her heart, forever, to yours.
God, Mom, and Me
Read Proverbs 31:10-31 together in an easy-to-understand
translation (
The Living Bible
and
The Message
are great).
Working together through this passage, make a list of all
the qualities of a virtuous woman. (For example: speaks
kindly, isn't lazy, helps the poor ...)
Look up the word
virtuous
in a dictionary together and
share its meaning.
Then have your daughter divide a big piece of paper or a
poster board into four to eight sections. At the top write,
"A Virtuous Woman is ..." and then in each square write
one of the qualities your daughter likes best from this passage.
Illustrate that quality or cut and paste pictures from
magazines of women or girls illustrating the virtue. She
may want to hang this in her room somewhere as a
reminder of the kind of person she most wants to be.
Chick Chat
You Oughta Be in Pictures
Plan a time to look over baby pictures and girlhood pictures
together. Memories will naturally evoke some great connective
conversation. Bring out some of your daughter's
old baby clothes or cards you received at her baby shower.
Continues...