MOTHERHOOD
THIS IS IN ANSWER TO THE
Thought for the Day
in the next column.
My greatest gift this
mother's day was knowing that God chose me to be a mother of two. I'm
still in awe daily. I too was one of those women who believed in not
having children because I wanted more time for MYSELF. Other reasons for
not wanting to have children extended from - "This is a crazy world" to
"What! and turn in to my mother?"
Two years and two children later, my whole chain-of-thought has been
broken and is in continual new linkage. Yes, it's true, I do the dishes,
clean-up, change diapers, do feedings, give baths, change clothes, play
with, entertain and teach the children then it's time for another meal,
more diaper changes and cleaning. I even wait to take showers while
they're napping or sleeping. My life isn't mine anymore, but I love it. I
love every single day. I love waking up and thanking God, not just for
myself, but for these two little people who I'm here to teach and love.
When it was just me, I did all kind of crazy things and put myself in many
dangerous situations.
Now, I'm careful of the predicament I put my children and myself in. I
understand LIFE better because every day as I'm teaching - I'm LEARNING -
about unconditional love, peace, joy, PATIENCE, gentleness, kindness,
goodness, long-suffering and SELF-CONTROL.
Monitoring what my children see and hear is a major situation and I'm sure
it will get harder as they get older and are in school. For now, I
put God's word in their spirit first thing in the morning. God's laws and
God's ways of doing things.
I don't need any reward from any human being for what I do. My rewards
come from God. I just know that my children have definitely saved me from
myself and for that I'm willing to do anything for them. Do I still love
to dance, paint, do photography, write and travel? - YES OH YES, but
everything in it's time. I won't be changing diapers forever and when I do
travel again - they will be with me and the trip will be that much more
fulfilling.
Jackie
Thanks
for sharing this, Joan. Very interesting dialogue! My thoughts on it come
from Al- Anon. We are not doing men & children a service taking care of
them. Much of this is co-dependence based & learned from our foremothers &
our panic at seeing those we love stumble. So we try to help too much &
rob our children of learning life's lessons firsthand. This may sound like
a brutal reading on the situation, but it is actually extremely loving &
has freed me up to soar to my own heights. The Al-Anon book "The Courage
to Change" is amazing on this topic!
Peace Namaste & all that good stuff, Mari
So true, enough said. I
love it. Omian
JC: Yes, well, having
children is also an act of kindness. Taking care of them in this time and
age is not as easy as it was 100 years ago. The WORLD is inundated with
commercial media that effects the activity and desires of young people,
which directly effects parenting. Saying "No" to children about their
every wish or desire, generated by today's media, can result in sullenness
and even depression because children belief they are privileged and should
HAVE everything that they see everyone else HAVING, with paying anything
in time or energy for it. Without the experience of having children in
this day and age, it is difficult for clerics of any religious
organization to understand the plight of parents today.
Even having children is a
dicotomy because it is an act of kindness for a woman to allow her body to
be used as a means of bringing a child into the world. Many women, today,
are choosing not to be this kind to humanity. They are preserving their
bodies for themselves and are not concerned with the perpetuation of
humankind, if it means giving their bodies for that purpose.
- ENERGY &
INTIMACY
- GIBSON &
GLOVER MAKE NEWS
- MOON NAMES
- MELANIN
- VISUALIZING
LIGHT
- BLACK THINK
TANK RESULTS
- DRIVING
WHILE BLACK
- THE STATE
OF OUR SOULS
- DISTRESSED
BY STRESS?
- MONEY AND
SPIRIT
-
DIVINE CONVERSATION
- MANSHARING
-
SEX AND SKIN
- THINK AND
ACT
-
Gullah-Geechee Culture
-
BLACKS IN NAZI GERMANY
-
THE GIFT OF JAZZ
- WOMEN
AWAKEN
- CHILDREN
AND SEX
- BREATHE,
MY FRIEND!
- WOMEN &
MUSIC
- SINGLE
GRANDMOTHERS
- AIN'T I A
WOMAN?
-
REPARATIONS
- MSG KILLS
-
MOTHERHOOD
-
STAND IN THE LIGHT
-
FORGIVENESS
- COSBY
SPEAKS
- TREE
SHAKERS
- CHILDREN
- EAGLES
- TERRORISM
IN AMERICA
- BARAKA ON
MILNER
- NAMES OF
AFRIKAN COUNTRIES
- INDIAN
MEANS "IN GOD"
- WHAT IS
BEBOP?
- ENGLAND'S
BLACK QUEEN
- LETTER TO
DAUGHTERS
- MASS
ASCENSION
- RUNOKO &
SCHOOLS
- AFRICAN
DEBT RELIEF
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MOTHER'S DAY PROCLAMATION
After
the heartbreak and deep wounding of the U.S. Civil War, Julia Ward Howe
was moved to write the Mother's Day Proclamation in 1870. It reads:
"Arise then, women of this day! Arise, all women who have hearts,
whether your baptism be that of water or tears!
"Say firmly: 'We will not have great questions decided by irrelevant
agencies.
Our husbands shall not come to us, reeking with carnage, for caresses and
applause.
Our sons shall not be taken from us to unlearn all that we have taught
them of charity, mercy and patience.
We women of one country will be too tender of those of another to allow
our sons to be trained to injure theirs.'
"From the bosom of the devastated earth, a voice goes up with our
own. It says, 'Disarm, disarm!'
The sword of murder is not the balance of justice. Blood does not wipe out
dishonor, nor does violence indicate possession.
As men have often forsaken the plow and the anvil at the summons of war,
let women now leave all that may be left of home for a great and earnest
day of counsel.
Let them meet first, as women, to bewail and commemorate the dead. Let
them solemnly take counsel with each other as to the means whereby the
great human family can live in peace, each bearing after his own time the
sacred impress, not of Caesar but of God.
"In the name of womanhood and of humanity, I earnestly ask that a
general congress of women without limit of nationality may be appointed
and held at some place deemed most convenient and at the earliest period
consistent with its objects, to promote the alliance of the different
nationalities, the amicable settlement of international questions, the
great and general interests of peace."
Moving
video reading at:
http://www.democracynow.org/2009/5/8/mothers_day_for_peace_a_dramatic
http://codepinkalert.org/article.php?list=type&type=423
STAND BY THE
LIGHT
Why? Because men and
children take this act of kindness by women for granted. So, when they
refuse to bear children, they have more time on their hands to wake up by
themselves, have a precious human life and not waste it on taking care of
other people - men and children - who rarely appreciate the sacrifices
that women make to take care of them. They can use ALLLL of their energies
to develop themselves and maybe expand their hearts to others, have kind
thoughts, not get angry or think badly of others who are getting on their
last nerve by crying, begging, demanding, desiring all the things that men
and children think they need from women. They can benefit others in ways
besides caretaking, cooking, cleaning and basically fulfilling all of
their wants and desires without expecting any help from them whatsoever.
Get my point??? Being a
monk is a commendable thing. But there would be NO HUMAN RACE if women
decided that monkdom was the best thing in the world for them to partake
in. Let's be real, wisdom comes from living. Living involves procreation,
which monks do not partake in. Children and husbands demand more from
women than most present day women care to give. When women become monkish,
the human race will cease to be and there will probably be
PEACE AT LAST!
Thought
for the Day from
http://www.WisdomAtWork.com
"Every day, think as you
wake up, today I am fortunate to have woken up, I am alive, I have a
precious human life, I am not going to waste it. I am going to use
all my energies to develop myself. To expand my heart out to others,
to achieve enlightenment for the benefit of all beings, I am going to have
kind thoughts toward others, I am not going to get angry, or think badly
about others, I am going to benefit others as much as I can." -- H.H. The
XIV Dalai Lama Ahhh))))
JC: Evidently,
the Dalai Lama doesn't have children.
You're right, the Dalai
Lama doesn't have any children. He's just the leader of a nation that has
been brutally occupied by the Chinese for nearly 60 years, and has witness
the deaths of nearly a million of his people, the destruction of his land,
and nearly all of the libraries, monasteries, medical schools, and
universities of his people, and who lives in exile and greats an endless
flood of refugees fleeing Tibet with horrendous stories of torture, rape,
brutal captivity, etc. He is regarded by his people as an
incarnation of the Bodhisattva/angel/archetype of Universal compassion,
and refers to himself as a simple monk, whose religion is kindness.
Thought
for the Day from
http://www.WisdomAtWork.com
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