Sneak Peek #4

Excerpt from THRIVE AND SURVIVE, ZERO TO FIVE

I (Margaret) recall a morning when our oldest three children were off at school and the younger two, Klaus and Hans, were ages two and one. After driving the carpool, I was having trouble tackling the breakfast dishes because two little boys were tugging on my legs, whining in discontent, and making me miserable. I felt like a tree they were trying to climb.

I’d done my best to distract them. “Look over there, Hans. Isn’t that your favorite truck? Rrrum-rrrum!” “Klaus, would you like an ice cube to play with? Here, have a whole bowl of them!” But nothing worked.

I don’t know what possessed me, but I decided to get down on their level to see what they were seeing. On the floor I knee-walked the length of the kitchen counter and back to the sink area, looking up. The problem was evident. My toddlers were trying to climb me simply because they couldn’t see what I was doing.

As they watched from below, they saw my arms moving and heard water flowing, but everything else was out of their line of vision. All toddlers long to participate in the activity at hand, so their low vantage point produced great frustration. Just to see if I’d been right, I put Klaus on a kitchen chair near the sink and plopped Hans atop the counter. Once they could see, the whining stopped, and both boys bubbled over with good cheer.

Of course no mommy can do this every time she does the dishes. But one way to succeed at mothering is to slow your pace to match your children’s. Maybe here and there in your busy life you can screech to an almost-halt and view life through their eyes. If you do, it’ll increase your willingness to include them in your work as it adds to your storehouse of patience.

My brief knee-walk gave me a valuable perspective on toddlerhood that I haven’t forgotten. Letting two little boys see what their mommy was doing put all three of us into the same slow moment. The boys appreciated it, and thirty years later, I’m still smiling at the memory.


SIDEBAR: A PATH TO SUCCESS

  • Partner with God.
  • Slow your pace.
  • Lower your expectations.
  • Cut unnecessary commitments.
  • Prioritize
  • Enlist help.
  • Find a mentor.
  • Enjoy your children.