School Supplies with a Purpose

Sandie RobertsonI was running some errands yesterday and one of my stops included Wal-Mart. I was walking pass the school supplies when something caught my eye…”There’s no one else on earth like you.” ~Sadie Robertson. Sadie has teamed up with Day Spring Cards and designed a whole collection of notebooks, folders, and composition books with encouraging quotes and scriptures. I picked up a few for my girls…. I love surrounding them with positive and encouraging words. Our girls need to know they are one of kind, precious, smart, strong, and talented. They need to know God cares for them more than anything in this world.

My girls don’t attend a public school, so they don’t deal with bullying from fellow students, but they are apart of extra curricular activities where kids can and do make rude and judgemental remarks. I want their minds and heart filled with truth of who they are and God’s love for them that those remarks bounce off them. These books are just another tool towards better self-confidence.

Just a little FYI: These items weren’t on the top shelf, they were actually on the bottom, and a little hidden.

Here’s a few STATISTICS to put things in perspective:

7 in 10 girls believe they are not good enough or do not measure up in some way, including their looks, performance in school and relationships with family and friends. – Real Girls, Real Pressure: National Report on the State of Self-Esteem, Dove Self-Esteem Fund

74% …of girls say they are under pressure to please everyone (Girls Inc, The Supergirl Dilemma)

98% … of girls feel there is an immense pressure from external sources to look a certain way (National Report on Self Esteem)

92% … of teen girls would like to change something about the way they look, with body weight ranking the highest. (Dove campaign)

90% … of eating disorders are found in girls (National Association for Self Esteem)

1 in 4 girls today fall into a clinical diagnosis – depression, eating disorders, cutting, and other mental/emotional disorders. On top of these, many more report being constantly anxious, sleep deprived, and under significant pressure. (The Triple Bind, Steven Hinshaw)

By age thirteen, 53% of American girls age 13 are “unhappy with their bodies.” This grows to…78% by the time girls reach seventeen. (National Institute on Media and the Family)

A Daughter’s Silent Cry to Her Father

“Daughters tend to be third in line for the attention of the man of the The Knock family.” Dr. James Dobson has come to this conclusion after many years of working with families. Fathers know intuitively that their boys require special attention, discipline and leadership, but they are often unaware of how desperately their daughters also need them.

gentleman I saw, on Saturday, one of the most touching things I’ve ever seen. Javier, my husband, has taken the girls on dates before, but this one just topped them all! It started, the day before, with him mentioning a date at Disney, but none of them wanted to go without the others. So after a little time of talking and throwing around some ideas, they decided Alayna and Kayla would set up a restaurant for Daddy and Victoria to go to. My husband got up immediately and put on his best suit and tie. Victoria put on her little black dress, accessorizing it with white pearls, then with a little touch of blush and lip gloss, for fun, and the princess was ready. Knock, knock, daddy was standing at her door.

Alayna and Kayla did a great job setting the mood with a little Mozart music, gigglesdesigning seating placements, menus, and entertainment. Giggles and smiles, happiness and joy, radiated from the face of a 7-year-old. This special day will never be forgotten because of a father’s decision to show his princess how wonderful she is.

We have all heard women talk more than men. Do you know why? Women and girls, connect emotionally through spoken words. Taking time to have meaningful and affectionate dialogue with your daughter is evidence that she is worthy, secure, and loved.

quoteA daughter’s sense of self worth and confidence is linked directly to her relationship with her dad. What he thinks about her and how he expresses his affection is a central source of her perceived value as a human being (Bringing Up Girls by Dr. James Dobson). Precious  These selected short proverbs were compiled or written by Harry Harrison and published in a book entitled Father to Daughter: Life Lessons on Raising a Girl.

*Accept the fact that [your little girl] will melt your heart anytime she chooses.

*Take part in her life now. Don’t wait until she’s 15 to try and develop a relationship.

*Sing to her while you’re rocking her. She’ll love hearing your voice—and it’s a great way to pass the time at 1 a.m.

*Remember, if you yell at a boy not to play with a wall socket, he’ll either stomp off or do it anyway. A girl will cry.

*Her mom will show her how to bake chocolate chip cookies. You show her how to dunk them in milk.

*Teach her to count. First her fingers. Then Cheerios, M&Ms, dandelions, and fireflies.

*Be prepared to watch Walt Disney movies with her some 200 times. Each.

*Never lose the wonder of watching her and her mother together.

*Relish the moments when she toddles up and for no reason at all throws her arms around your neck. Resist the urge to buy her the world.

*Trust her mom to understand the mystery of little girls. You have yet to figure out the mystery of big ones.

*Never, ever, make fun of her.

*Bear in mind that from the very beginning your personality will shape her.

*Never forget that supportive fathers produce daughters with high self- esteem.

*Read to her often. Very soon, she’ll be reading to you.

*Give her a picture of you to put in her first purse. If you’re lucky, she’ll always carry a photo of you.

*Don’t tolerate her temper tantrums. Not now. Not when she’s 15. Your home will be more peaceful for this.

*Restrict her TV viewing, unless you want her to grow up with the values Hollywood teaches.

*Little girls are fascinated by escalators. Make sure you hold hands.

*Make her a Valentine’s Day card—every year.

*Lie on your backs in the grass together and look for shapes in the clouds. It’s a good way to approach life when you’re young.

*Be home for dinner on time. Very important.

*Ask her about her day, every day. Share her wonder.

*Keep her secrets. This way she will begin to trust men.

*Take her for a walk in the woods. Show her what poison ivy looks like, how to cross a stream, how to find her way back.

*Let her teach you. About what she learned in school today. About the Pilgrims, or multiplication, or manatees. How to sing her favorite song. How to bake a cake. How to braid Barbie’s hair.

*Praise her often. Let her know you love her the way she is. If you tell her this often enough she might remember it throughout adolescence.

*Make up stories to tell each other at night. Stretch her imagination.

*Surprise her by showing up at her school for lunch, bearing Happy Meals or pizza.

*Never argue with her mom in front of her. As hard as it may be, walk away.

*Remember, society is teaching her its values 24/7. You need to be more determined to teach her yours.

*Never permit her to talk back rudely—to you or to her mother. Or anybody else, for that matter.

*Teach her patience, kindness, and tolerance. If you don’t, many years from now you’ll wish you had.

*Take her to the golf course with you. Give her a sawed-off club she can use to whack balls around.

*Think before you speak. Even when you don’t mean to, you can end up hurting her feelings.

*Never laugh at her dreams.

*Teach her to read between the lines. Remember, though, that she will probably have a better natural ability for this than you.

*Take her out of town to somewhere she’s never been at least once a year. This will develop her sense of adventure.

*Don’t miss a recital, concert, play, or any other performance of hers. Not now. Not until she graduates.

*Encourage her to be kind. Even to the girl nobody likes.

*Make sure she can reach you 24 hours a day.

*Remember, she needs a strong self-image before she becomes an awkward teen. A father’s love can make all the difference.

*Accept the fact that the loving, tender angel you’ve spent the last decade with may disappear sometimes. She will return.

*Remember, teenage girls spend hours in their room doing something. No man has ever really figured out what that something is.

*Once she begins to develop physically and sexually, don’t pull away from her.

*Get to know her friends. Middle school marks the zenith of peer influence.

*Remind her that the most sacred thing between a father and daughter is trust.

*Drive the car pool. You’ll learn firsthand what she’s doing each day.

*Remember, when you’re dealing with a 13-year-old girl, for all intents and purposes, you’re dealing with a fruitcake.

*Talk to her often about decision-making and sex. About her peer pressure, about love, about romance, about God. You never know when it will be just the thing she needs to hear.

*Watch your language around her. Insist she watch hers.

*Girls this age can be uncomfortable stating what they really need. More often than not, she needs you to be a parent.

*Accept the fact that girls squeal when they’re happy or confused or excited or scared or because they just saw a certain boy in line.

*When she’s particularly angry, sit down with her and have her try to describe what’s going on. Remember, the longer you listen, the more you’ll learn.

*Don’t subscribe to magazines that exploit women. It makes a statement about how you view all women.

*If you don’t approve of the way she looks before she goes out, send her back to her room to start over. Be gentle but firm.

*There will be days when you think you’ve raised an alien. Those are the same days she feels she’s being raised by one.

*Don’t let her play you and her mother against each other.

*Never call her names. No matter how mad you are. No matter what she did. If you do, she’ll remember it for the rest of her life.

*Remember—many girls look back on middle school as the worst time in their lives. Stay tuned; stay involved.

*Volunteer to drive her and her friends to the movies. Then just listen while they talk.

*The day she’s born, ask God to guide you in all aspects of raising her.

*Drag her to church . . . every week. She may not share your enthusiasm, but after 18 years, the message will have sunk in.

*Forgive her when she seeks forgiveness. This is the best way for her to learn to forgive others.

*Teach her how to be moral in an age that bombards her with sexual imagery and innuendo.

*Ask her every now and then about her spiritual life. If she asks you what you mean, be prepared to have a discussion with her.

*Teach her to pray for her enemies. This could possibly include a rotating cast of classmates and ex-boyfriends.

*Teach her to treat each day as holy.

*Teach her that sometimes God has other plans.

*No matter how much you are tempted, don’t yell at the refs or insult the umpire. You’ll embarrass her and look like an idiot.

*You will have to teach her how to drive . . . without making her cry.

*Make it very clear that you expect her to wear a seat belt. Even over her prom dress.

*Persuade her to buy gas when the fuel tank level is at a quarter tank, not when the needle is buried and the car is riding on fumes.

*Odd-looking boys will start showing up at your house. This is to be expected because adolescent boys are odd-looking.

*Let her see, by the way you treat your wife, the way a man is supposed to treat a woman.

*Teach her how to look a boy in the eye and say “No.”

*Do not tease her about boyfriends. She may not have one, and you might make her feel like she’s supposed to.

*Understand that if she suddenly becomes a football fanatic even though she hates the game, you can be sure a boy is involved.

*Teach her that if she acts stupid to attract boys, she’ll attract stupid boys.

*Explain to her that there are dangerous boys as well as honorable ones, and how to tell the difference.

*If a boy pulls up and honks for her, go out and have words with him. Explain that your daughter answers to a doorbell.

*Wait up for her. Knowing Dad will be greeting her at the door has a very positive effect on her decision-making process.

*Remember, every girl’s heart gets broken. There’s nothing you can do to fix it. Hunting down the boy won’t help. On the other hand, she will also break a few hearts herself.

*Don’t get too emotionally involved in her love life. It will drive you nuts.

*Don’t let her moods or anger push you away. She needs you now more than ever.

*You have no power over how much makeup, shampoo, suntan lotion, skin creams, hair color treatment, mascara, eyeliner, perfume, cologne, body wash, and bath lotion she will buy. Accept this and move on.

*Be firm about maintaining family traditions. They will become more important to her than either of you can imagine.

*Take long walks with her. If you just listen, she’ll eventually tell you everything that’s on her mind.

*Remember, if her home life is crazy, the rest of her life will be too.

*Teach her to respect herself.

*Don’t let her miss school to get her hair done for a party. Unless all you want is a party girl.

*Remember, you’re her definition of a man. If you drink and smoke and take drugs, chances are the men in her life will, too.

*Understand that when she’s 15, and wearing a black dress, with her hair done and face made up, you will be very hesitant to let her leave the house.

*Visit college campuses with her in her junior year. (This is not the time to get emotional. There will be plenty of time for that.)

*There will be times when you’d rather stick needles in your eyes than have a particular conversation with her. This is when you must act like a father.

*Prepare for the day when you’re not the most important man in her life.

*Tell her the three keys to wisdom: not believing all you hear, not spending all you have, not sleeping all you want. This will be difficult for her until she graduates from college.

*Have a look around her room. Take a moment to look at her pictures, her photos, her keepsakes. These are her memories. This was the childhood you gave her.

*Remember, she will break your heart when she leaves for college. But you will survive.

*Tell her she is the daughter you always dreamed about.

* In the end, let her go.

 

 

 

 

Do you know you are beautiful? “Kind of…”

20140317-200502.jpg

The other night as I tucked my daughter into bed, I looked into her eyes and said, “Do you know you are beautiful?” “Well, kind of” and then she put her head under the covers. “What is it? Why do you say kind of?” “Well, there’s a girl at church in the second grade that is really pretty.” “Oh, I see.” I explained just because someone else is pretty, doesn’t mean you aren’t. “God made each person beautiful in their own unique way.”

I enjoy telling the girls stories of what God was thinking when he designed each of them. For example, God thought to himself…I’m going to make Victoria with beautiful, long, thick eyelashes and eyes that can brighten up anyone’s day, and a heart that is more valuable than any piece of gold. After a few sentences, their faces always brighten up.

I know beauty on the outside is not the most important thing in life, but it is something little girls and big girls think about. As parents,we can tell our children they are beautiful everyday, but they have to believe it themselves.

Encourage your little ones today and everyday. Speak life into the inner and outer beauty, but make sure you ask them what they think of themselves. Don’t over look or take their thoughts lightly. To them their feelings and thoughts of their self-image is as real as the skin on their bodies.

Power Verses:
Do not let your adorning be external—the braiding of hair and the putting on of gold jewelry, or the clothing you wear— but let your adorning be the hidden person of the heart with the imperishable beauty of a gentle and quiet spirit, which in God’s sight is very precious. ~1 Peter 3:3-4

I praise you, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made. Wonderful are your works; my soul knows it very well. ~Psalm 139:14

She is more precious than jewels, and nothing you desire can compare with her. Long life is in her right hand; in her left hand are riches and honor. Her ways are ways of pleasantness, and all her paths are peace. She is a tree of life to those who lay hold of her; those who hold her fast are called blessed. ~Proverbs 3:15-18