The
Wisdom of Work
by Rachel Weaver Dear Mother Friends,
It seems so long since I have chatted with you. I am a grandma now
twice, and my little band of followers has become much smaller. The
oldest two are married. One daughter is often gone to help other
mothers cope and survive, and our son is out on his lawn-mowing job.
Once again our children at home daily are fourteen, twelve, nine,
seven and four years old. How quickly the ten years have passed
since the last five were that age! How many lessons we have learned.
Reflecting over
my twenty-five years of marriage, I can see things we could have
done differently. But I also see lots of joyful, happy times and
many beautiful memories. Stop and savor each minute that you have.
Smile, sing, smell the roses, cuddle your little ones and work
beside your growing up ones. I see many hidden blessings in the
principle of hard work. When we mothers seek to instill this in our
children, it has a way of multiplying our time. Anybody out there
need more of that?
The
wisdom of work is so fruitful. It is a practical theme
built upon a spiritual
principle. Ecclesiastes 9:10 says, “Whatsoever thy hand findeth to
do, do it with all thy might.” In another place, in the New
Testament, Paul says we should work “heartily as unto the Lord.” Proverbs
mentions many things that an industrious woman can and should do.
The principle of working with our hands is found all
through the Bible and is a major theme in the life of the Proverbs
thirty-one woman.
Working Together
It is up to us
whether our children are going to be able to carry out these
commands joyfully. We, as parents, are their teachers and role
models. The best way for them to learn is right beside us.
First, and
foremost, we must like to work ourselves. There is a tremendous
satisfaction in a job well done. A clean, neat house is a blessing
and an accomplishment. If we do not enjoy rolling up our sleeves and
filling the sink with hot, soapy water and leaving the kitchen
shining, then we must begin with ourselves. Who can hope to have
children who work with a will and sing as they scrub, if they do not
set that example themselves?
So dear mother,
if you are struggling with this, stop and consider. No one taught
you the joy of a job well done. No one trained you to clean up your
mess before making the next one. Here you are, twelve to thirty
years later, and the mess has multiplied. You still do not like to
work but your work has multiplied. What then can be done?
I
believe that you need to seek the Lord seriously and cry
out to Him to help you
change. Study the Lord’s instructions about working. Memorize them.
Then realizing that you cannot teach that which you do not enjoy,
set out earnestly to get rid of these hindrances.
Take
a close look at the time wasters in most of our homes.
We all recognize the
phone as a major one. With your husband’s consent and blessing, plan
a one hour slot every morning and evening when you take the phone
off the hook, or use the answering machine, so that you are free
to
work with the children.
Make 7:30-8:30
a.m. your clean up time (you set the hour) and list the tidy-up
morning chores that should be completed. At our house they look like
this. Everyone helps.
-
Check to see
if beds are made.
-
Do dishes.
-
Shine
refrigerator, counter and stove.
-
Sweep floors,
vacuum rugs.
-
Empty all
trash.
-
Clean and
shine bathrooms.
-
Put in a load
of laundry.
-
Comb
little girls’ hair.
Then when these
chores are done, you could stop and read a story to the children for
half an hour from that interesting book you just purchased. You will
be amazed at how fast they can whisk away the chores with only a
small incentive. If you repeat the process immediately after lunch
and again after supper, varying the chores to suit the time of day,
you will find that the house begins to stay a bit neater.
Limit your
phone time all the time. You will have more time to work with
the children. If you must talk, try setting a timer for fifteen
minutes and excuse yourself when it rings. Use a cordless phone and
walk from room to room picking up things and putting them away.
Teach your children, by your example, to be tidy.
The computer is
also a huge time thief. It was not available when our older children
were small. There was no email or Internet. Now I watch many young
mothers (and older ones, too) glued to the screen on email loops and
surfing the net for information. No matter how good the
communication or information, no matter how much good you think you
are serving, if you are not meeting your first responsibility, you
are making a mistake. No one else will teach your growing daughter
how to make a good meal and keep a neat, tidy house. No one else
will teach your young son to pick up the broom when the meal is over
and quickly and neatly sweep the floor and empty the trash. The day
may come when you may have the time for the phone and computer, but
you do not have it now. I do not have it now. As much as I
love to read and write, I am not on email loops. I do not have the
time. These children of mine are only here for a short while.
I see this more keenly now than ever.
It
is up to me to create many of the good work habits in my
children. If I teach
them to feel comfortable living in a mess with jobs half done, who
will teach their children? Many, many mothers in the last
forty to
fifty years had a profession as their priority. They were not
engaged in making mothers and homemakers. They had escaped that
drudgery. You may be the fruit of this professional mothering. No
one taught most of you to bake fresh, crusty homemade bread
or even
keep a tidy kitchen. Now five, or even eight, children later you
are throwing up your hands in despair.
Although it
will be a painful process, I believe you can change this. How
special it would be if each of you dear sisters could have an older
mom come and show you how to do this for a few weeks, but it simply
cannot be done. Most of us are still training our own nest full.
Perhaps with my paper and pen, I can inspire you and show you the
way, bit by bit.
The Freedom of a
Schedule
Schedules
are a real help at our house. Let me share with you what
usually works for
me. Sometimes I need to re-evaluate and change things a bit. You
may need to use different times or add other chores. I
am fond of
saying, “My schedule is only a framework. It is adjustable.” It
gives us a comfortable goal to work for. It is a proven fact that
those who use a schedule can get more work done than those who do
not.
We eat our
breakfast at 7:00 A.M. since our daddy works at home. Then he sits
down and has worship with us. After that, each of us gets a chore to
do.
7:45 to 8:00
a.m.
-
7-year-old
does the dishes.
-
9-year-old
cleans and shines the bathrooms.
-
12-year-old
sweeps the floors and vacuums the rugs.
-
14-year-old
works with the laundry and combs hair of 7-year-old.
Mom oversees,
picks up here and there and in general works beside the children. I
might rinse and stack a few dishes for the seven-year-old and check
on the bathrooms and floors. Often I help a bit sorting wash or
hanging up dresses in the laundry. By 8:15-8:30 we are done, and the
house is neat. Remember, there was not a big mess to start
with. If you do have a big mess, you may need to stop everything for
a few days. No using the phone or computer. Simplify meals and
concentrate on getting things back into order. Then begin to try and
keep them there.
-
8:30 A.M.
Finds us ready for school or projects, depending on the time of
year.
-
12:00 Lunch.
-
12:30 We go
through the clean-up routine all over again.
-
1:00 Free
time for everyone, usually quiet reading or projects while Mom and
the four-year-old take a rest.
-
2:30 Time for
school or projects.
-
5:30 Supper
meal.
-
6:00 Rerun
chore time.
-
7:30 Read
aloud story.
-
8:00 Bedtime
for little ones.
-
9:00 Bedtime
for fourteen and up.
Afternoon
chores also have a bit of order according to the day of the week.
-
Monday:
always a big wash day, boys work for Dad.
-
Tuesday:
project day: sew, bake, landscape and mulch.
-
Wednesday:
odds and ends of jobs, stop early for prayer meeting.
-
Thursday:
clean bedrooms, remake beds with fresh sheets, clean upstairs
bathroom.
-
Friday:
clean main floor and windows, dust and do laundry.
-
Saturday:
clean out refrigerator, bathe children, lay out Sunday clothes,
prepare food for Sunday.
We
try to wash every day except Wednesday. Sometimes we even
do then. We always do
a huge wash of about eight loads on Monday. Tuesday there are
usually one or two loads. Thursday there are quite a few if we wash
the bed sheets, and often there are five loads on Friday.
If we do
this consistently we can keep our heads above water and “Mount
Washmore” seems more conquerable. This means the twelve or
fourteen-year-old spends a lot of time doing laundry. I help
some. We all help with folding. The littlest ones fold table napkins
and washcloths. The next one folds dish towels and towels. We sort
the wash into piles by owner as we fold. When the laundry is
completed our “UPS men” deliver them to the right rooms for the
owner to put away. In reality, laundry is a huge chore for
big families. It is lots more fun to do it, fold it neatly and put
it away, than to have smelly piles lying around or clean wash heaped
here and there unfolded. That is downright depressing. Our laundry
person (8-14) is supposed to start one load when she rises in the
morning (sometimes I do it for him or her). That way, after
breakfast, a new load can be put in and we are on the way.
You Do Not Have to be
Perfect
Our
house is
not spotless, mind you. Sometimes I drop by with friends whose
families started when ours did, and they have four or five children.
Their homes are spotless. There are no toys or little shoes in
sight. The windowpanes are not smudged or the wash overflowing. I
still have little folks who flatten their noses on the windows and
leave sticky handprints on the door. They love bug collections and
pressed flowers. Sometimes they do not sweep in the corners or wash
the dishes clean. They forget to take a load of dresses out of the
dryer and hang them up promptly. They track in dirt. But we are
learning, and we will get it accomplished. I must remember that this
too will pass.
Day
after day, I must train my children gently, consistently
and patiently. That is
where the rubber meets the road for me. The gentle, patient part.
It has been a lo-o-ong day. I am weary—and, oh no—someone
has finished sweeping and there are still crumbs underneath
the table. Do I come
unglued? Or do I patiently teach and train again? God has been
working in my heart the need to be a more patient mother, blessing
as I train. When I am joyful, the children joyfully respond
to me.
When I am critical and demanding, their response is very poor.
Join me in
learning to love working with your children. Do it enthusiastically.
Sometimes make a game out of it. Make chores a family-together time
when possible. Bless the children for their efforts. Over time, you
will find your workload lightened and your home a more tidy, restful
place to be.
Take
the phone off the hook, shut off the computer, and you
will be amazed at how
much more time you have in your day. Try it for a week, maybe two.
You may never want to go back to being “plugged in” again.
God is so
patient with us. He teaches us again and again. He leads us on so
gently. Let us strive to be like Him as we teach our small bands of
followers. Let us lift up our eyes and our hearts and be joyful and
bless His name.
A Job Well Done
Childhood
is your golden opportunity to teach them to enjoy the satisfaction
of a
job well done. My husband’s mother always said, “Let the child help
you when he wants to (he is usually very young). Then by the time
he
is old enough to do the job well, he already enjoys helping.”
I find this is
so true. Four-year-olds can do breakfast dishes by making a big
mess, but they love it. When they are seven, they can be depended on
to do them pretty well.
Inspire
your younger child (six and down) by making some chores
fun. They love to
become mailman and deliver picked up items to their proper places.
They enjoy becoming a horse and pulling the wagon up the
drive to
dump the trash (keep the bags small). Every three to five-year-old
loves to stand at the sink and wash breakfast dishes. This
is our
smallest pile of dishes. We fold a towel over the edge of the sink
and put a plastic apron on the child so he doesn’t get totally
soaked. I show them how to wash cups, and I come back every so often
to rinse (and wash!) and stack them to dry. Then we work at the
silverware. It takes a long time, but it occupies them so well. When
we are done, we wipe every thing dry. Sometimes we even end up
changing Johnny’s clothes, but he had fun. Who says work isn’t fun?
And always, if possible, let them stretch to do a chore that is
almost too big for them. That is the one they usually want to do.
Then praise them for a job well done. Our dishwasher can hardly wait
to clean the bathroom. Our bathroom cleaner is so anxious to
graduate to doing the laundry. Each step up indicates a growth in
character and person. When they beg to be transferred, we tell them,
“As soon as you can do this job cheerfully and without reminder, you
can move up.” It is amazing what an incentive that is. By the time
they are fourteen, they can run the house fairly well even if Mom
has a special day off. They love to show me they can do it. They
have everything clean and everyone happy when I come home.
Blessing
a child for a job well done is a great incentive. I remember
very
clearly my childhood from ten to twelve. My mother was not well,
and as the oldest of the five children, I had to go ahead.
She often
says to me now, “I wish you would not have had to work so hard.” I
am thankful that I did. I never really minded it. Mother was always
so grateful for what we accomplished that we felt special.
Teach each
child to clean up his own mess. Even at two, he can be trained to
pick up his Duplos or put away his Playdough. When he is done with a
project, require him to put away his scissors, glue and colors.
There can be penalties for projects that are not cleaned up. Be
innovative. Just be sure you teach it. Do not let them throw their
caps and coats on the floor. Be sure there is a place for them and
require them (as young as two) to put them there. Never let them
throw candy wrappers or other trash on the floor. These go in the
waste can. You may think this goes without saying, but this is not
always so.
Teach them to
wipe up their own spills as soon as they can run for a towel. Be
there and help them, but let them do it. This minimizes carelessness
and sticky messes. When garbage is on the counter, empty it. Do not
let it set there overnight to smell and draw flies.
When dishes are
dirty, wash them. We expect our cook and baker to clean up their
dishes and bowls when they are done baking. This is part of their
job. We do not let it for the next meal. This cuts down on major
kitchen messes.
When we have a
big cooking, canning or baking day, we do have a big mess. But our
day is not completed until the dishes are done and the floor is
washed.
Teach each
child to make his own bed, hang up his nightclothes and dispose of
his dirty laundry properly. Work together weekly to clean up
outside. Pick up trash and sweep the sidewalks and porches. Pull
weeds together. Pick beans together and sing while you work.
Children
work better with you than alone. There is a secret here.
They do a better
job, and it is more fun to do it together. The prophet says, “And
the people had a mind to work.” I find this happens much more easily
when we do it as a family. Sometimes we will make a meal for
someone, and we all take part. The smaller ones do little jobs, and
someone makes the dessert. We all get involved in cutting, chopping
and frying. We enjoy it so much that occasionally the children will
plan a special meal with lots of festive dishes and invite a few
families over to join us. Perhaps we will serve an Indian feast or a
Mexican fiesta meal. Or maybe we will just have a baked potato bar
with lots of toppings. Of course it takes time to get it all ready,
but we spend a whole day of fun doing it. Then we spread the table
with a nice cloth and cut fresh flowers for a centerpiece. We have
an exciting evening of fun and good food. The children will be
learning to work, and they won’t even know it. Sometimes we will
take an afternoon off and go help another mother. Each child gets
his marching orders, and because we are blessing someone, floors,
dishes and laundry seem like fun.
What Can the Children
Do?
There are so
many things that children can do, if we will put our mind to work on
it. Here is a list compiled by Karen Johnson taken from Vintage
Housekeeping for the 20th Century Christian Woman. It is broken
down into categories of age. You can see at a glance that there are
great possibilities here. You can make your own list by taking some
time to do creative thinking.
18 Months to
3 years
-
Help pick up
and put away toys.
-
Fold and put
away washcloths.
-
Run
to get and put items as directed.
-
Set spoon and
cup on high chair for meals.
3 to 5 years
-
Dress self.
-
Fold and put
away clothes.
-
Empty small
garbage into bigger pails to take to the dumpster.
-
Take laundry
to washer from hampers.
-
Finish
straightening pillows and coverlet.
-
Feed and
water family pet.
-
Bathe self
with some help (hair and back).
-
Set table for
meals.
-
Clear table
after meals.
-
Empty
silverware from dishwasher without sharp knives.
-
Clean spots
from floor.
-
Stack books
for bookcase.
5 to 7 years
-
Make bed
completely.
-
Change
sheets.
-
Vacuum room.
-
Dust room and
lower furniture.
-
Wash, rinse
and dry general dishes.
-
Sweep and mop
small rooms or entryways.
-
Fold towels.
-
Sort and load
washer.
-
Straighten
drawers and closets.
-
Care for
personal care unsupervised.
-
Fold top bed
blankets, afghans, etc.
-
Take buttons
off old garments.
-
Hang simple
clothes from dryer to hanger and on line.
-
Make rolls
from bread dough.
-
Cut biscuits
for pans.
-
Mark
cook-ahead dishes.
-
Help pick up
around house.
-
Hand
embroidery work.
-
Sew a 9-patch
quilt.
-
Transplant
plants into garden.
-
Weed garden.
-
Water plants.
-
Bring in
wood.
-
Pick-up yard.
-
Harvest
vegetables from garden.
-
Help prepare
and pack canning jars.
8 to 12 year
olds
-
Cobweb inside
and outside house.
-
Sweep inside
and outside house.
-
Sweep and/or
vacuum under dining room table.
-
Vacuum.
-
Water lawn
and garden.
-
Rake
flowerbeds.
-
Hoe garden
and flowerbeds.
-
Bring trash
to curb.
-
Stack
cook-ahead meals in freezer and get daily.
-
Pour drinks
for meals.
-
Start washer.
-
Put all
laundry on laundry line (expect sheets or other big items).
-
Fold most
clothing articles.
-
Make simple
lunch meals or cook-ahead meals.
-
Prepare and
make cookies, muffins and cakes.
-
Sew basic
patterns.
-
Iron basic
clothes carefully.
-
Stack wood.
For Those Who Have
Failed
What do you do
if your children are beyond the age of excitement and eagerness?
What if work is drudgery to them? How do you turn the tables around
and enlist their cooperation?
Here a few
suggestions:
-
Learn to like
work yourself.
-
Work with
them. Do not spend long hours doing other things while they plod
along.
-
Sit down with
them and confess your faults. Tell them what God is showing you.
Enlist them to help as you both learn these lessons.
-
Give them
time off as rewards for jobs well done, or plan a Popsicle party
when the weeds are pulled. Use your imagination.
-
Set
to work fixing one room at a time, and then try to
keep it neat. You may
only get the kitchen and dining room done the first week. Don’t
forget to scrub the stovetop and clean the cupboards and
refrigerator. Keep it neat for at least one week before going on
to the next room.
-
Enlist your
oldest child first and train him. Then move down. Soon you will
all be working together.
Do not despair.
Begin now. Work at it slowly, and slowly you will see a difference.
Teaching your children to work will take a long time, but one day
they will be your best helpers. When you are sick, they will carry
on. You will go away, and they will cook and clean. This is what I
call the reward period. It will come if we are diligent. When it
does come, it is a great blessing.
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