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Archive for July, 2008

Don’t wait for extraordinary opportunities. Take this moment and make it great.

“My children are my biggest teachers.” I say this a lot, and I mean it.

Day in and day out, their wise little beings are emanating with wisdom, if I am open and present enough to learn.

Last night I was about to walk upstairs to start the proverbial night-time routine with my kids. At the pink house, this entails yoga, meditation, shower, brushing teeth, reading, prayers, and snuggling. How this takes as long as it does is a confirmation that time is an illusion, if you ever had any doubt.

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To dare is to lose one’s footing momentarily. To not dare is to lose oneself.
-Soren Kierkegaard

As you open your body, you open your mind.

There is no revenge as complete as forgiveness.

Breathe in what you want and breathe out what you no longer need.

The ultimate forgiveness is forgiving yourself.

I am a magnet for divine prosperity, light, love, and joy.

The winds of grace are blowing. Raise your sails.

I’m a minimalist. I have one pair of jeans, one pair of spring/summer sandals, one pair of fall/winter shoes, one pair of gloves, one hat. Energy is in everything—including material objects—and so I only have what I love and what I use, and I put my energy into other shiny things besides consumerism.

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Check Out Taylor's Blog at The Boston Herald
Super-Mom of the Month
mom of month

Super-mom Susan Tordella:

 

Every mom is a super mom because being a mom requires learning how to put other people’s needs ahead of our own, and management skills – of our emotions, of other people, and of a home.

My four kids were born in seven years by the time I was 29 years old. This was a blessing and a challenge. After having three children in three and a half years, I realized two things: to surrender to their needs because we were outnumbered; and to get help through parenting groups.

My children have given me so many gifts that I feel privileged to be their mother. Even though raising our kids required a lot of work, time and money, the rewards are worth it.

The most valuable gift they gave me was to learn patience, to slow down and wait for them to learn. They were so patient with me while I learned parenting skills – how to set reasonable boundaries with them and be kind, firm and consistent. The journey was never smooth or straight. How boring would that be!?

Even though sometimes motherhood was overwhelming, I cherish the days I spent doing things together as a family – cooking, eating and cleaning up together; going places – as simple as taking walks or going to the pool; doing crafts and chores – yes, even chores; reading and playing together on a regular day; supporting each other; laughing and telling stories.

I did my best to love and support my children through every stage. I strived to be the best mother possible, which meant forgiving myself and them for being human. My goal was that they grow up strong and independent, able to love and be loved, to make good decisions, and to want to have a relationship with me. After age 18, it’s optional to have a relationship with parents.

Mine have chosen to have relationships with me now that they’re ages 23 to 30. They are still the most important thing in my life. They have given me a focus – to raise them, to learn positive parenting skills, and to share what I learned with other parents.

While my kids were growing up, I attended parenting support groups and then led them – following the saying, “You teach what you most need to know.” In 2010 I wrote a book on how chores teach the priceless gift of self-discipline. Learning to manage my children and sustain a positive relationship with them required me to learn the skills of a CEO – with a kind heart, a generous wallet and coaching them to believe, “You can do it.”

We taught each other, “You can do it.” Now I teach parents “You can do it.” Raising them has been the most instructive, challenging, rewarding, and fun task of my life, with the longest lasting consequences. We do give our kids roots and wings. It requires careful tending of the soil, with water, sun, and community, followed by the perilous journey of learning to fly. What an adventure.

 

 

 

 

Susan Tordella

Egg-ducator

K-12 Bullying awareness & prevention

www.fowlbehavior.net