
At the beginning of this summer, God started teaching me about discipline. And I’ll be honest, when I saw it starting to happen, I was excited because I knew that it would be good. What I didn’t know was how far reaching and applicable in a number of aspects of my life these lessons would be. Let me take you back to the beginning.
Thanks to facebook and all of those activetrainer and nike+ running posts, I decided to try the Couch to 5K running plan, I was passive aggressively bullied into it. And it was only a week into the program that I decided it was pretty pointless to put in the effort to do all that running if I was just going to eat junk all the time. So I jumped on the Weight Watchers band wagon too. There was a pretty obvious common thread between the two – there was always an excuse not to do what I was supposed to and it was always rewarding when I chose to do it anyway. (I could end the post there. That last sentence pretty much sums up everything else I’m going to say.)
I actually loved the C25K runs and the food I was eating on WW. But life is messy and sometimes I couldn’t find clean socks or the car was out of gas and the gym was about to close or I was out of greens for a salad or Sona was clinging to my leg while I was dragging her around the kitchen preparing a meal out of real food instead of whatever I could grab from a package. However, choosing to just wear dirty socks or run outside or make an entire meal with one hand so that I could hold Sona always, always, always made me feel good. And while losing the last of my “baby weight” (now that the “baby” is almost two) was a bonus, it was all totally worth it just for the way it made me feel. It was my first practical lesson in the art and blessings of discipline.
Then summer ended and fall began. I started a program at our church called the Bible Training Center for Leaders. It’s a class for women that covers Bible Study Methods, Old/New Testament Surveys, and other topics that force me to exercise the atrophied academic muscles in my brain. I told Senator that I feel like my brain, before having children, was a sponge and now it feels like a sponge that hasn’t been wrung out. It’s functions are the same, but it’s not as efficient as it used to be. We have about 5 hours of homework each week and after an hour or so of studying topics like exegesis and systematic study, my brain just feels numb. Fortunately, God gave me a really tangible lesson in building up endurance and the blessing of perseverance this summer. So I’m treating these assignments in the same way that I approached each new run. I push myself further than what is comfortable, trusting that the act of discipline will produce results and maybe by the end of the semester my brain will feel a little more absorbant again.
And though this post has been mostly me-focused, we still have three little ladies running around us at all times. Perhaps discipline and children seems like an obvious connection, but what I’ve realized here, still has more to do with me than them. Lots of this is stuff that I’ve known/been aware of for a long time, but it’s finally all coming together and I’m finally placing the proper amount of importance on them. What it boils down to is that the best discipline for my children is really discipline for me. I can’t expect them to thrive in their obedience if I’m not providing a solid structure in which they have proper parameters to obey. The truth is that there are plenty of moments where it would be easier to put quarreling children in front of a movie or give them a snack to occupy them rather than putting in the effort of discipline. I’m speaking of discipline in the broad sense of the word, not just timeouts or revoked privileges, but training and teaching them what actions and behaviors are appropriate and which are not. Which can be a pretty overwhelming job!
But I was encouraged recently to realize that by being consistent and putting in the work of discipline for them, I’m beginning to lay the foundation for teaching them the Gospel. One of my biggest fears in parenting is that I won’t be able to teach my children, in real, tangible ways, who God is. My prayer is that they would see God, not in segments of our life (at church, during prayer, etc.), but in our day to day lives. And then I had this revelation… we were driving in the car and Willa hit Sona’s foot. We’ve been teaching the girls not to act out aggressively with each other when they’re angry, so hitting is an automatic timeout. I told Willa that she could sit in her timeout when we got home, which, of course, upset her. The easy way out would have been just to find someway to appease them all and secure some peace for myself. Ice cream, maybe. But then I realized that in order to understand real mercy, you have to understand consequences. You can never fully appreciate that someone else stepped in to take your punishment for you, until you understand that there is punishment to be expected. Not to say that I think I have to become some militant timeout robot, never giving grace. But that I shouldn’t avoid giving them an opportunity to learn that their actions have consequences because I’m feeling a little lazy or its an inconvenience.
I suppose what I’m saying is not that I’ve learned to discipline them differently or more strictly, but that I have a new perspective on why I’m disciplining them at all. Whether that means sending a guilty 4 1/2 year old to timeout or simply intervening and trying to teach them more polite and loving ways to interact – I’m doing it because they need it. And, of course, because someday I want them to understand the fullness of the grace that was given to them.
So it goes – I’m trying more and more to eat what I should, study intently the material that numbs my brain, and take every opportunity to teach my children how to be more loving – even when it’s inconvenient. Even when it doesn’t feel like that’s what I want to do. Trusting that the discipline will produce results that exceed the fruits of my laziness – which, to be honest, are bitter and few.
And let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us, 2 fixing our eyes on Jesus, the pioneer and perfecter of faith. Hebrews 12:1-2 (partial)