Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Fatherhood


"Earthly Father, Heavenly Father" 
Mormon Message made by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints


(Script from the video) "I'm awake. I remember Him. I gaze upon them before I part. They lie in their bed, unaware of me watching. I leave, they sleep. The small home I help provide is their world. They play, they explore, learning to move, to feel, to see, to know, not once thinking how it all came to be. Crayons, toys, books; it's all for them. The fridge opens, the pantry exposed, they expect food to be there. Not a thought, not a doubt, just hunger. Cereal, milk, yogurt, messy fingers, messy faces, all fed. Tummies are full. Now it's nap time. My wife likes nap time. Once again, they lay in the comfort we provide. All while I work, I'm far, but close; always thinking of them. My phone rings, I only hear breathing. I smile; my wife's phone is now missing. I do it all for them. I work, that they may grow. They trust so deeply; how I yearn to do the same. They see so little of how it all came to be, never questioning, only trusting. I come home; two-second hugs. Now I'm a horse. We eat dinner, brush teeth. Jammy time. Finally, it's bed time. Once again, they lay their heads on the pillows we provide. I will be their protector. I will be their gentle friend. I will be my wife's faithful husband. I am a father, I am also a son. And while I may not understand all that He does for me, I do know that all that I am, and all that I have is because He's a father to me. I now stand, very aware, of how it all came to be."


Fatherhood is a fairly controversial topic in today's society. There has been some talk that father's may not even be necessary. Could you imagine it? A world with no fathers? 


In the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS), we learn that we are to strive to become perfect. What better way for a man to become perfect than to be like our Father in Heaven?


Heavenly Father has done so much for each of us - He has provided everything. Literally everything. 


Our Heavenly Father:

1. Watches over us
2. Blesses us
3. Gives us comfort
4. Listens when we need Him to - and even when we don't ask Him
5. Always answers our prayers
6. Knows and wants the best for us and will do anything to give the best to us
7. Never forgets us - even if we sometimes forget Him
8. Brings peace, hope, love, charity
9. Sacrifices everything 
10. Wants us to return to Him
11. Is always, always, always there
12. Never turns away from us
13. Guides our lives but lets us live the way we want
14. Allows us to always make a choice
15. Offers us advice
16. Unconditionally loves us no matter the decisions we make
17. Reveals His will 
18. Has a unique and distinct plan for each of us
19. Knows us by name
20. Knows what's in our thoughts and heart
21. Has the power to heal - physically, mentally, emotionally, spiritually
22. Provides

I could go on and on and on. But think about that list for a moment - really think about it. Listed above is a perfect man. A perfect father. It's obvious how much we need Him in our lives, whether or not we want to recognize it. We are nothing without our Heavenly Father, just as we are nothing without an earthly father.


So that's why it breaks my heart to know that there are those who believe a father to be unnecessary. Pointless. Unimportant. 


Honestly, despite our individual experiences - despite what we think we know to be true concerning fatherhood - we need fathers. 


Avec Amour, 


Elisse   

Saturday, November 23, 2013

Divine

Commitment: "A promise of dedication to a relationship in which there is an emotional attachment to another person who has made the same promise." - Robert and Jeanette Lauer

Commitment consists of three things: a promise, complete dedication, and total attachment. When there is a healthy attachment to each other, you want nothing more than to dedicate yourself to them and keep the promises that you, together, have made.

The quote regards a couple who has made the same promise to the other. It's being committed and dedicated to that same promise. When that promise is broken, for what ever reason, that specific commitment is broken.

Forgive the reference, but in the Disney Junior show Sophia the First, Sophia says, "My mom always said a broken promise can never be fixed."


I used to think that, that's how promises worked - you broke it, it was broken. But then I studied Family Relations and learned how completely and undoubtly false that statement is. Sure the natural would tell you that it's gone. But that's why marriage is a divine institution - because we push aside the natural.

"To know that you have someone that loves you, and on whom you can depend no matter what problems may arise, is really important." - Anonymous

Ultimately, we are here on this earth to have experiences that challenge us to return to live with our Father in Heaven. The last covenant most of us will make in this life is an eternal marriage. What's more perfect and divine than that?

Avec Amour,

Elisse

Thursday, November 21, 2013

ABC...X

In 1949 a man with the name of Reuben Hill created a model in order to study the stressors that families experience in times of war. He name this model "ABCX."

Actual event
Both resources and responses
Cognition
 eXperience

We each are going to experience challenges and difficulties in our lives. What may be a crisis for you may not be one for another and vise versa. The question that comes up is: How am I (or how are we) going to get through this? Another question may be: "Shall I falter, or shall I finish?" - President Thomas S. Monson; Prophet of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

President Monson also said, "When the pathway of life takes a cruel turn, there is the temptation to ask the question 'Why me?' At times there appears to be no light at the end of the tunnel, no sunrise to end night's darkness. We feel encompassed by the disappointment of shattered dreams and the despair of vanished hopes. We join in uttering the biblical plea, 'Is there no balm in Gilead?' We feel abandoned, heartbroken, alone. We are inclined to view our own personal misfortunes through the distorted prism of pessimism. We become impatient for a solution to our problems, forgetting that frequently the heavenly virtue of patience is required."

Full talk (I highly recommend watching it)


To go back to the ABCX model - it allows us the opportunity to look at the (A) event , decide how the our (C) cognition (the way we think about it) is going to affect the way we (B) respond, and, overall, help us choose what we're going to take away from it (X).

Effectively coping in crisis is something that I have been trying to work on for a while now. I used to believe in what President Monson refers to as the "distorted prism of pessimism" - I think we all have. However, I have come to learn and realize how much that negatively impacts our lives when we go through it believing that.

If there is anything that I have learned in life - if at Judgment Day I'm standing before God and He asks me what I've learned, I would tell Him "You will never have a bad experience without something magical somewhere inside it."

When I learned this truth, it completely changed the way I look at the trials I am presented with. Each crisis that is put into our lives allows us an opportunity to make a choice - and so I ask you to make a choice:

1. How are you going to respond to crisis?

2. Are you going to falter, or are you going to finish?

Avec Amour,

Elisse

Saturday, November 9, 2013

The Ideal

"What qualifies as the perfect guy/girl for you?"

How many times have we been asked this question? How many endless lists have we made to create that person?

Think of the game MASH - not only were we creating an ideal person through that game, but we were also creating our ideal life. And how often were we disappointed with the results we got? Sure we got our number one pick here and there but that doesn't necessarily mean we got every one. I remember trying to get the perfect amount of tally marks so I would at least get the most important thing - the perfect guy.

Now it seems like there's nothing wrong with that. It's just an innocent game, right? It gives us the chance to write out our perfect life; is that really so bad?

Honestly, yes. It is. Because it's not just the game, it's how we look at our lives. We grew up dreaming out exactly the kind of life we wanted. And, more importantly, we grew up dreaming about the perfect person for us.

Don't get me wrong, it's important to know what we want to look for in a person. There are some characteristics or qualities that may be essential. But I feel as though the title we give it that context needs to be changed.

OUR IDEAL PERSON SHOULD BE THE ONE WHO STEALS OUR HEARTS - NOT THE PERSON WE'VE CREATED IN OUR MINDS!

Let's be honest, how many people have we turned away because he or she didn't fit our list? How many people have we walked by because, at first glance, we thought they couldn't possibly live up to all the expectations and requirements we have set?

At a young age, I created my list. I grew up convinced that I was going to find the person who checked everything off that list. It was a selfish notion. But when I finally found someone, that checklist...it didn't matter anymore. Because, suddenly, he became my ideal.




I believe the ideal is the one we can't help but fall in love with. The ideal is the one who helps us forget all the petty little expectations. The ideal is the one who becomes more than enough. The ideal is the end result.

So instead of playing the Let's See Who Can Check Everything Off The List game, how about we allow those who could become our ideal into our lives?

Avec Amour,

Elisse

Friday, November 1, 2013

Consecration

Consecration is the act of giving all one has to the cause of something greater - something divine. Could we seek for anything greater within marriage?



President Ezra Taft Benson, the 13th Prophet of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, stated, "In order to learn the law of consecration, you must first learn to live the law of the Lord."

Now we ask ourselves, how is this done? How can this teaching help turn our marriage from the natural to the divine? There are six steps that we can work on to reach that perfect, yet challenging stage of consecration:

1. Obedience
2. Sacrifice
3. Compromise: It's not easy - it's challenging to sacrifice what we have in order to create something new; something beautiful. Marriage requires an infinite amount of work - how much are we willing to put in?
4. Repentance/Forgiveness
5. Chastity
6. Consecration: You need to give EVERYTHING you have to become one with another person - it's a cheap move not to - put EVERYTHING you have on the altar.

Once we've reached consecration, how can we keep that act of complete and total service in our lives?

1. Invest what you want into the marriage:
         - Be invested, not vested
         - IMMERSE yourself in it
         - THROW yourself into it

2. "Great unselfishness comes in marriage"
         - We need to learn to think of someone else when making decisions...marriage isn't a one-way street.
         - We need to learn to care about something our significant other loves just as much as they do.
         - It's not natural, it's divine

3. "Complete living of the commandment"
         - The commandments act as a formula to help guide our lives.
         -   When we are living the commandments and our spouse is living the commandments, there's no where to move but closer to God.
         - Despite what many may say about the "restrictions" that the commandments puts on our lives, they actually bless marriage in more ways then one. Why not follow some principles that can help build your marriage towards eternity?

4. "Pinnacle of perfection in those areas that matter most"
          - Just like with compromising, we needs to reformulate what matters the most.

5. "Continued courtship"
         - I haven't seen all of the movie "Date Night, " but the one part I did see just amazed me. It was a Friday night and their babysitter showed up and said, "Aren't you guys going on your date?" What an inspiring example. How great it is for children to see their parents going on dates!


         - It allows two people who love each other to talk without any outside distractions. It's okay to want/have time away from your children.
         - It gives you the opportunity to remember why you fell in love - it's a rekindling experience.
         - You can more fully express love and attention for your spouse.

How beautiful a marriage must be when this much effort is put into it! We should look forward to the opportunity to give all that we have in exchange for anothers love and eternity.

Avec Amour,

Elisse