Tag Archives: FIRST Wild Card Tour

Madeline’s Protector by Vanessa Riley

It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old…or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!

Today’s Wild Card author is:

and the book:

White Rose Publishing (April 19, 2013)
***Special thanks to Tyora Moody for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

The Regency and Victorian eras have always been a magnetizing draw for Vanessa Riley. Even as she worked to complete her doctorate in Mechanical Engineering, she made time for renaissance fairs and any novel or cinematographic work depicting these genteel societies of old. Perhaps, the attraction arises from the kinship she feels with the period being brought up in the restrictive Southern Bible Belt with its stringent definitions of decent behavior and life expectations. Perhaps the common dominator to this appeal is her own thirty day Christian courtship or even the arranged marriages of her uncles; each is emblematic of the nuptials of those earlier times.

A technology muse like Dr. Vanessa Riley is probably not the immediate choice to write about haute ton English society set in the 1800′s. With her most recent published work being “Reducing Deformation by Phase Manipulation,” the common visceral reaction is that Providence has given another mule a voice to tell His story. Nevertheless, this mule uses her determined spirit and dogmatic tenacity to master the subject and to discover the hidden nuances of a character making him believable, her human and both ready to be used of God.

Vanessa holds a doctorate in mechanical engineering and a masters in industrial engineering and engineering management from Stanford University. She also earned BS and MS in mechanical engineering from Penn State University. She has been a radio anchorwoman and church announcer. She is a member of the American Christian Fiction Writers Association and Romance Writers of America.

Today, Vanessa juggles mothering a eight year old, her seventeenth wedding anniversary, engineering, writing and speaking at women’s events. She is known for her humorous delivery of poignant truths. Vanessa is currently, editor in chief of an online social network, www.busymama.net.

Visit the author’s website.

SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:

If all the young men of England leapt off a cliff, Madeline St. James wouldn’t care. Then she’d have peace. Her nightmares of courtship would end, and she’d cozy up with a Psalm in her aunt’s quiet sculpture garden.

Yet, a chance meeting and a bullet wound change everything, and Madeline must trust the Good Shepherd has led her to the altar to marry a dashing stranger, Lord Devonshire.
Death and pain are no strangers to Justain Delveaux, Lord Devonshire, and he vows his dutiful bride will be kept safe and in her place. Though this compromised marriage is in-name-only, his wife and her unwavering faith both intrigue and allure him. Perchance when he thwarts his brother’s killer, Justain will tempt the unpredictable Madeline with the comfort of his arms.

But can Madeline and the stubborn earl forge a true bond before the next disaster strikes?

Product Details:
List Price: $16.99
Paperback: 354 pages
Publisher: White Rose Publishing (April 19, 2013)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1611162262
ISBN-13: 978-1611162264

AND NOW…THE FIRST CHAPTER:

Shropshire, England, Iron Country, August 5, 1821
“Stop, thief!” Madeline St. James grabbed the coarse sleeve of the man who stole her guineas, but he shook free and dashed away.
“Give those back, this instant.” Mouth open, pulse racing, she stopped her pursuit. A scream bubbled in the pit of her stomach, but she pursed her lips. A St. James never made a public scene or conceded defeat.
The thief reached the other side of the vacant courtyard, well ahead of a wagon rumbling up the cobblestone lane. He shot her a toothless grin and traipsed to the main building of Tilford Coaching Inn.
The dray and its lumbering horse team swerved closer, but if she waited one more second, the thief would escape her view. Another man would’ve taken advantage of her. Not again.
Picking up her weighty skirts, she sprinted onto the slick rocks of the road. The silver hem of her long carriage dress slapped at the mud. Better to be dirty than a victim. Cupping her palm to her eyes, she scanned for the thief.
The man bounded up the stone entree. He’d vanish like her driver, amongst the sea of gaming travellers.
She lengthened her stride to intercept him.
One high step too many, her boot heel caught in the sagging silk, tripping her. The air pushed from her lungs as she fell flat. The soggy earth saturated her layers to the shift and petticoat. Her injured elbow stung anew.

Wheels squealed. Hooves clomped the cobbles. Soon the horses would be on top of her, stomping and kicking.
A couple of tugs and yanks couldn’t fish her boot free. No escape this time. Abba Fatherforgive. She turned her head and braced for the onslaught.
A band of iron gripped her stomach and hauled her from the muck. She went limp, sprawled against the hard chest of a rescuer. He pulled her off the lane and under one of the overhanging galleries of the inn.
Wind slapped her cheek as the horses swept past. No one held the reins. The wagon swung wide, crashed into the inn’s main building, and flipped to the ground. Ejected barrels hit the whitewashed wall and sprayed foamy liquid.
Madeline’s breath came in heaves, and she clutched the titan arm sheltering her. No fainting. No need to lose more dignity.
One of the draught horses loosed from its tether and galloped to the emerald pines scalloping the surrounding hills. The other roan remained with the wreck, lifting its crooked leg. Poor lame creature.
An old man rushed out of the inn and cut at the horse’s strap. “Bring my gun. This one needs to be put down.”
With an awkward hold on her middle, her rescuer spun her, perhaps to keep her from seeing the cruelty. He needn’t be concerned.
The past two weeks had numbed her to violence. Yet, God kept her as He did again today. “Thank you,

Providence/ but please…spare the roan.”
“You’re welcome, but it’s Devonshire, Lord Devonshire.” The low voice kissed her ear, heated the pulsing vein along her throat.
How could this man sound calm? They both could’ve died.
He flung open the door to an onyx carriage and eased her onto the floorboards. “Are you injured, miss?”
“No.” She rubbed her arms and gazed at her rescuer. He was very tall, enough to make her feel dainty even at her Amazon height. With broad shoulders and a solid chin, she couldn’t have sculpted a more perfect hero. “The horse, sir? Can you help it?”
“Stay put. This mere mortal will see what can be done.” He grabbed his top hat from the seat and marched away. His elegant form, straight posture, disappeared into the growing crowd.
It didn’t matter she sat on the floor, chilled in her clothes, imposing demands of a stranger. Even against this errant horse, Death shouldn’t win. She’d seen its victories too often, with Mama’s passing seven years ago and Cousin Thomas dying this past spring.
She squeezed her throbbing elbow. Falling aggravated the sprain.
A quick shake of her foot didn’t release her trapped kid boot but tore the lace trim on her gown, Mama’s carriage dress. A lump formed in Madeline’s throat. She missed Mama so much.
A few choice words shouted from the crowd and a round of loud snickers interrupted her woolgathering.
Lord Devonshire returned and rubbed the scruff of his neck. “It cost three guineas, but your nag will be kept by the innkeeper’s daughter.”

“I’ll repay you, sir. My abigail has my reticule.” She swallowed gall. The thief took most of her money, but surely three coins were left.
He waved his hand. “I’d rather not be a paid fool.” Leaning along the door, he stared at her with irises bluer than a summer day.
What could Lord Devonshire learn from her disheveled appearance? She didn’t mind his gaze. Since travelling to Shropshire, grey ash painted the clouds, no doubt from the ore foundries. No sunny skies like Hampshire.
“Now to be of true assistance.” He reached under her hem, gripped above her ankle, and freed her boot from the tangle of silk. The warmth arising from his gloved hands seared her thin stockings. “Not broken.” He released her foot to dangle through the entrance.
Shocking and bold. Though dressed as a gentleman in buff buckskins and an azure tailcoat, this definitely wasn’t someone with whom to be alone.
Her wits returned, and she bounced out of the carriage. “I’ll get your payment.”
“Wait.” Deep and commanding like Father’s voice, his words stopped her. “I saw you trip trailing the miner.”
She pivoted and clasped her hands across her ruined pelisse. Mud covered the delicate puce rosettes embroidered on the bodice.
“You were very brave to run after him.”
“Bacon-brained would be a more apt description.” A raindrop splashed her forehead. Her bonnet must have fallen in the commotion. She wiped her brow. The cold balm of mud smoothed against her skin. Her heart sunk, and she wrenched off her soiled gloves. If her cheeks weren’t already scarlet, they should be.

He shortened the distance between them, a smile tugging at his full lips. “In mining country, the strikes have set everyone on edge. Some resort to crime. There’s a would-be highwayman on every corner. You must take care around Tilford.”
A fortnight ago, his concern might’ve warmed her, but not now.
“Father of Heav’n!” Mrs. Elsie Wilkins, Madeline’s abigail, ran to her.
“Y’ weren’t to leave the livery.” The good woman wrapped her stubby arms about Madeline’s hips. “Too much for m’ heart.”
In vain, Madeline pushed at Mrs. Wilkins’s indigo redingote to keep it from soiling, but no force could stop the woman’s bear-like embrace.
Madeline’s trampled bonnet peeked from the motherly woman’s reticule. Dredged in dirt, the hat’s ostrich plume lay crooked. Even in haste, her abigail took care of Madeline.
With another clench, Mrs. Wilkins finally let go. “Y’ face?” She yanked from her pocket a crimson cloth and scrubbed Madeline’s chin.
Madeline clasped her friend’s wrist. “Dear, hand me my scarf. I’ll do it.”
Mrs. Wilkins shook her head and kept swatting the mud. She didn’t want to come on this adventure, but how could Madeline be without her strongest ally? It must be the Irish blood bubbling in the abigail’s veins, making her so loyal.
“First a broken wheel, now this.” Mrs. Wilkins added a spit shine to Madeline’s cheek then pivoted to Lord Devonshire. “The stable boys said ye saved her. Bless ye.”
“I…I saw the lass fall in the path of the wagon. I

am the Earl of Devonshire. Very glad to be of assistance.” An unreadable expression set on his countenance as he flicked a rain droplet from his sleeve. “Are there others in your party?”
“There’s me–Mrs. Wilkins–and my lady, Miss Madeline St. James.” She stretched on tiptoes and picked at Madeline’s unraveling chignon, reseating pins and tucking tresses. “And m’ lady’s driver, but he disappeared, the no good lout.”
Great. Mrs. Wilkins just confirmed they were alone. Now he’d be obliged to help. Indebted to a man. Could this day get any worse?
The earl rubbed his jaw. His gaze seemed locked on the colourful scarf.
Another drip from the overcast skies splattered and curled into the sable-brown hair peeking beneath Lord Devonshire’s brim. He was too fine looking, too virile to be trusted. Step-mother’s nephew, the handsome Mr. Kent, imparted that lesson before Madeline left home.
“Mrs. Wilkins, hand me my coins. I need to repay his lordship.”
“No, miss. ‘Tis my duty to escort you to your destination.”
Madeline shook her head. “‘Unnecessary.”
“Cheshire. Please take us there.” Mrs. Wilkins dabbed at her coat. “Like a divine appointm’nt, the earl being here.”
“I can’t speak for divinity, but you might say I’ve been waiting on a sign.” He slipped the cloth from Mrs. Wilkins and waved it like a flag. “Someone brave to show me the way.”
“I suppose we have no choice.” Madeline snatched it from him with trembling fingers. She may be bacon

brained but not helpless or a plaything.
“There’s always a choice. Like should I chase a scoundrel or let you freeze?”
She stilled her shaking palms.
He stepped near, removed his tailcoat, and draped it onto her shoulders. With his thick thumbs, he flipped the collar’s revers to cradle her neck. His touch was gentle. “This should stop your shivers. I’ll have my Mason get blankets.”
Hugging herself beneath the weighty wool, Madeline gaped at Lord Devonshire. “Sir, we haven’t agreed.”
“The drizzle will get worse.” He rotated to Mrs. Wilkins. “The young lady was just in my Berlin. Perhaps the visit was too short to attest to its comfort.”
Trimmed in gold, the carriage could overshadow her father’s. Either the earl possessed great wealth or liked the appearance of it. In her experience, both conditions made men pompous or cruel. She rubbed her elbow again.
Mrs. Wilkins curtsied. “My lord, we’ve two trunks in the stables with our brok’n carriage.”
The earl nodded, opened the door to his Berlin, and then plodded the long lane toward the livery of the coaching inn. Was it confidence or arrogance squaring his shoulders?
He didn’t pivot to check on them, not once. Arrogance.
“Come along, Lady Maddie. Don’t get stubborn. Remember your plan.”
Madeline raised her chin, grasped Mrs. Wilkins’s forearm, and lumbered toward Lord Devonshire’s carriage. “Another obstacle to peace.”
Her friend’s cheeks glowed. “The beginning of

peace, child. It’s the beginning.”
If only Mrs. Wilkins could be right. The unease in Madeline’s spirit disagreed.
****
The temptation to look back almost overtook Justain Delveaux, the Earl of Devonshire. He strode faster to the livery. The girl had been spooked. If he seemed anxious, she’d run.
A fire of independence burned in her jade eyes. He’d have to placate Miss St. James and win her trust. Then she’d lead him to the killer.
At the entry of the hay-filled livery, his driver brushed Athena, Justain’s filly. “Sir, are you ready to give up? The informant isn’t going to show.”
Justain stroked Athena’s thick ebony coat, a shade lighter than Miss St. James’s raven locks. “He didn’t. She did. Look behind me. Are ladies entering my Berlin?”
Mason squinted. “Yes.”
“The young one possesses the red cloth signal. She’s the informant.”
Furrowing his brows, Mason shrugged. “You and your jokes, sir.”
“I’m serious. We’re taking them to Cheshire, probably a clandestine meeting. Never thought to look for a woman. Well, not for an informant. The lass will lead me to lynch–”
“Must you wax poetic?” Mason chortled. “Genteel women shouldn’t be left here/ but…”
“Just say it.”
“We need to leave, sir. Something’s afoot.” Mason wiped water from the brim of his tricorn. “The miners

say a blood vengeance rides tonight.”
“We’ll leave soon, with my new acquaintances.” Why was Mason hedging his words? Since Justain was knee-high, the man never held his tongue.
Rain fell in buckets. Justain moved under the stable’s roof.
Mason and Athena followed. He searched his blue-black flap coat and retrieved his treasured silver flask and Justain’s bottle of tincture. “The filly’s cut is sealed.”
“Superb, but no more of this.” Justain pocketed the tincture. “Put away your spirits and say your peace.”
“This chase won’t bring Lord Richard back.” His driver’s voice grated like a rebuke from the old man, Justain’s father. “You’ve other things to contend.”
Justain concentrated on the steady rhythm of the shower. It blocked the memory of Richard’s last breath and Justain’s mounting guilt. He was to blame for Richard dying. Nothing took precedence over avenging his brother.
“Send blankets to my guests. Have the stable grooms load Miss St. James’s trunks.” He trudged toward the Berlin. This couldn’t be a fool’s errand. He hated being a fool.
****
Madeline forced a smile at Lord Devonshire as he leapt into the Berlin. He sat in the opposing seat, tossed his sodden top hat and gloves onto the floorboards, then pushed wet hair from his face. The rain poured hard minutes after she and Mrs. Wilkins entered his carriage, and it hadn’t lessened.
Seeing him soaked eased her slight agitation at him.

“Thank ye, for savin’ m’ mistress.” Mrs. Wilkins snuggled into the corner of his carriage, her greying red curls rested upon the creamy silk lining the walls. “Ye gen’rous to escort us to Cheshire.” She yawned then winked at Madeline. “So noble and so handsome.”
Heat crept up Madeline’s neck. She didn’t need to be reminded of his looks or his bravery. “We are grateful.”
“Be at ease. It’s not often I play the hero these days.” His sable-brown mop shadowed a lean nose and tanned cheeks. “The escapade gave me needed exercise.”
At least, he remained humoured. Gratitude should weigh on her spirit, but was his deed happenstance or had he followed her? Miles and miles from Hampshire, and the feeling of being chased refused to quit.
A servant stuck his head inside the carriage. Rain drizzled down his uniform causing the braiding on his mantle to droop. “To Cheshire, my lord?”
Twisting a signet ring, Lord Devonshire glanced toward Madeline and Mrs. Wilkins and then turned to the opening. “Yes, Mason, I haven’t changed my mind. My guests have gone to great lengths to find me. I shan’t forsake them.”
What? Why did the earl think she sought him? What tales men must feed each other.
“Yes, my lord.” The frowning servant nodded and shut the heavy door.
Madeline smoothed her bodice, trying to calm the tickle in her stomach. Father told her every kindness held a price. She’d paid enough for trusting Mr. Kent. The pain from his blows to her side persisted.

“Lord Devonshire, we haven’t departed. Pray help us hire a post chaise to ferry my abigail and me to my aunt?”
“No. I will see this through.” He cleared his throat. “I look forward to our conversation.”
Though the earl’s countenance appeared pleasant with his lips curling, he fidgeted his wilted cravat. Dried, the neckcloth might’ve held a little height in a fashionable sense. Was he one of those pompous dandies? Her scarlet handkerchief did hold his interest.
No. If he were, the earl would’ve let Madeline die than risk wrinkles to his clothes. The parade of fortune hunters Step-mother marched through Avington Manor surely would’ve made no effort. The shrewish woman probably hoped the flock of peacocks supping at their home could convince Madeline to accept her nephew for a mate, a lesser of evils.
The carriage lurched forward. Lord Devonshire reclined as if he posed for a portrait. His steady gaze set upon her.
Did he want his jacket returned? Did her slipping bonnet offend him? She righted it and smoothed its bent feather. “May I at least reimburse the livery expenses for my carriage?”
“Keep your precious gold coins. ‘Tis my honour to serve you, Miss St. James.” He grinned. Smooth white teeth peeked. “The opportunity to pull a headstrong beauty from harm’s way is something I relish.”
“Would you let a thief abscond with your coins?”
His smile dissolved. “No. I protect what is mine, and I’ll avenge what is stolen.”
Few had the patience for her opinions. She rolled one of the silver buttons of his jacket along her thumb.
“Praise be unto Prov…” Mrs. Wilkins snorted a harsh noise, her chin bobbling in the throes of sleep. With a fold and a tuck, Madeline secured the dear woman’s blanket then tugged a book from the abigail’s reticule.

“You two are my first guests in this new coach.” The earl’s tone was low.
He needn’t be concerned about awakening Mrs. Wilkins. After this harrowing day, wild elephants couldn’t rouse her.
Slumping near the window, Madeline glanced at the retreating landscape, the evergreens reflecting in the puddles. She’d enjoy nature now, before they crossed the Severn Gorge. Seeing the bottomless chasm would rattle her frayed nerves. The last time, ten years ago, she took this route with her parents and had curled next to Mama and hid within the folds of her shawl. Abba Father, please allow each of my steps to be surefooted. Tell Mama I miss her.
Lord Devonshire inched closer. Though the carriage rocked with each clip-clop of the horse team, he didn’t sway. His tall frame sat erect like a sleek marble sculpture. “Is there anything I can do to make you comfortable?”
Mrs. Wilkins’s bonnet fell onto her lap, her snores bleating to an embarrassing high pitch. The symphony of snoots quieted, but not before one protracted trumpet.
“No, sir.” Madeline’s cheeks warmed. Explaining her hasty exodus from Avington would lower his opinion of her, not that she needed his good opinion.
Egad. Step-mother was right. Madeline did over think things. She yanked her bookmark, flipped a few pages, and tried to lose herself in the passage.
He rapped the book and lowered it. “You’ll ruin your sight, reading all the way to Cheshire. At our next stop, I’ll have a lantern set down, unless I can capture your interest.”

Another opportunist. Yes, he’d saved her from being trampled, but he was still a man. Did they do anything but seek their own pleasures? Like Mr. Kent.
Kent’s sibilant whispers turned to yells ringing in her ear. He threatened to kill her for refusing his proposal. What type of life would she have if she’d eloped with a man of such vile temperament? She shuddered. Shoving her novel in Kent’s eye darkened it and helped her escape.
“Miss St. James? Are you well?”
“Yes.” She glanced at her wet hero. “You must be cold. I should return this.” She lifted the tailcoat an inch and an ache rippled along her elbow. She clenched her teeth and let the jacket fall back to her shoulders.
“Just damp.” He whipped his sleeves, rustling ivory buttons. “You seem to favour your right arm. Did I injure you in our last embrace?”
“No…no/ my lord.” Her breath hitched, and she sniffed an odour similar to fresh dye. It reeked. She huddled deeper in the tailcoat and swathed her nostrils. The mild fragrance of sandalwood lingered in Lord Devonshire’s jacket. Peace reined in every storm, and this one smelled of safety, like her father’s robes.
The earl shifted his boots hard onto the floor. “Some say confession is good for the soul. Do tell. Why were you at Tilford–a gaming den, no less?”
Madeline wobbled on the tufted cushion. “My carriage broke down. One usually has no choice where this happens.”
“And your driver’s missing? Such a fanciful story.

I love a quality Banbury.” He folded his arms like a solicitor in the midst of an inquiry. “Are you running from or to someone?”
To my aunt in Cheshire, Lady Cecil Glaston. She’s to tour Italy with me.” Well, it would be the plan once Madeline convinced the art patroness. Madeline intended to sculpt such a stirring picture, Aunt would be anxious to see Michelangelo’s David and abandon holding a matchmaking season. After Mr. Kent’s betrayal, Madeline wasn’t ready to belong to any man.
“I think you are running from someone whose wrath you fear. Don’t lose courage. So much trouble is wrought from silence.” For one second, the earl’s sky-blue pools seemed to ripple with hurt before he blinked them clear. “We mustn’t allow this.”
She squinted at Lord Devonshire. Could he know she’d kept quiet about Mr. Kent?
“Help me, Miss St. James, my brave lass?”
Madeline’s heart responded to the plea, thundering within her ribs, but could she be of aid without inviting Kent’s revenge?
Lord Devonshire reached for her hand. “Tell me your secret. My dear, you can trust me.”

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales, is entirely coincidental.

Madeline’s Protector


COPYRIGHT 2012 by Vanessa Riley


All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author or Pelican Ventures, LLC except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.


eBook editions are licensed for your personal enjoyment only. eBooks may not be re-sold, copied or given to other people. If you would like to share an eBook edition, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with.


Contact Information: titleadmin@pelicanbookgroup.com


Scripture quotations, unless otherwise indicated are taken from the King James translation, public domain.


Cover Art by Nicola Martinez


White Rose Publishing, a division of Pelican Ventures, LLC www.pelicanbookgroup.com PO Box 1738 *Aztec, NM * 87410


White Rose Publishing Circle and Rosebud logo is a trademark of Pelican Ventures, LLC


Publishing History First White Rose Edition, 2013 Print Edition ISBN 978-1-61116-226-4 Electronic Edition ISBN 978-1-61116-225-7
Published in the United States of America

This Mom’s Review coming soon…

The Christian Mama’s Guide to the First School Years by Erin MacPherson

It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old…or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!

Today’s Wild Card author is:

and the book:

Thomas Nelson (April 9, 2013)
***Special thanks to Erin MacPherson for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Erin MacPherson is a mom of three who never does anything halfway. When she discovered she was pregnant she decided to write about it—but then kept writing. A former staff writer and editor for Nickelodeon, Erin now entertains parents on her personal blog as well as through freelance magazine articles, devotionals and speaking. She wants to come beside her readers not only as a confidant and Christian sister, but also as a best girlfriend who understands what daily life is all about.

Visit the author’s website.



SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:

The Christian Mama’s Guide to the First School Years: Prepares moms for the time when their school-aged kids take their first few steps into the world and away from mama’s nest.

Sending a child off to school is a whole lot more than stocking up on school supplies and packing a (somewhat) healthy lunch. This helpful guidebook walks Christian moms through:

  • discovering a long-term vision for the person that Christ has purposed for your child to become
  • instilling a sense of “who I am and where I came from” in your child
  • choosing a school for your kids
  • helping your kids to develop key attributes—courage, kindness, perseverance—that lead to success in school
  • dealing with teachers, sports, and lessons
  • navigating those difficult conversations that will come sooner rather than later
  • a special feature includes sidebars “From the Principal’s Office” with insights from a 35-year elementary school principal and educator

Moms will learn how to cover their children in prayer so that their launch into the world, and away from her control, is done with grace and wisdom—helping them grow into the men and women God intended them to be.

Product Details:
List Price: $15.99

Paperback: 208 pages
Publisher: Thomas Nelson (April 9, 2013)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0849964768
ISBN-13: 978-0849964763

AND NOW…THE FIRST CHAPTER:


Introduction

Into the Big, Wide (and Sometimes Scary) World

Whoever created the drop-off policy at my son Joey’s elementary school had clearly never met a newbie kindergarten mom.  Because when the letter outlining first-day drop off instructions arrived in the mail along with his school supply list, I started to hyperventilate.  Okay, so I might be exaggerating, but I certainly had a momentary panic where I considered whiting out my son’s birth date on his birth certificate and keeping him home another year.

The letter was short and sweet.

Dear Parents,

In an effort to ensure the safety of our students on the first day of school, we ask that you drop all kids off by the front doors and then continue to exit through the west parking lot.  We will have teachers and student leaders available to escort new kindergarten students through the doors and into the cafeteria where their teachers will be waiting.  We ask that you please do not park your car in order to walk your child into the school . . .

That’s all I had to read for the panic to start.  My son—my baby!—had to walk from my car and into the big, wide school all by himself.  All.  By.  Himself.  What if his backpack was too heavy?  Or what if a big bad fifth grader bullied him as he walked in?  (I hear those big kids are getting bigger every year.)  I mean, the potential crises that could result in those ten steps between my car and the school were enough to make my heart start a-racin’.  He could stub his toe as he walked through the threshold, for goodness’ sake, and spend the entire day in toe-stubbed misery.  This was not good.  Not good at all.

As terrible scenarios raced through my mind, my husband had to restrain me from picking up the phone and calling the school to complain.  He reminded me that schools make policies like that for a reason.  And usually that reason was because of over-panicky parents like me.  Okay, he didn’t say that.  But I could tell he was thinking it.

On the Saturday before school started, we drove to the school and practiced.  (I know, I know.  Overachiever mom.  Or maybe it’s overprotective mom.)  I pulled up in front of the school and let Joey unbuckle himself, grab his backpack, and walk those ten big steps to the door.  He did it five times—just for good measure—and once I was confidant that he was going to manage just fine without stubbing his toe, we left.

And on Monday, I put on my bravest face.

I scrubbed Joey’s face and combed his hair.  I made pancakes for breakfast and arranged blueberries in the shape of a smiley face on top.  I lovingly packed his lunch and wrote him a little note just to say how much I adored him (because I figured he’d be reading by lunchtime, he’s super smart).  I took at least ten thousand pictures before I loaded him into the car.  And I put those keys in the ignition and headed toward the school while trying to control the tears that threatened to start rolling down my face.

As we pulled up to the school, I pasted a smile on my face as I turned to my baby-turned-big boy and said “This is it, Joey!  I’m so proud of you!  I love you.”

And he was off.

Confidently taking those first ten steps into the big, wide world.

I watched him taking every single one of those steps in my rearview mirror with tears streaming down my face.  Tears of joy.  Tears of sadness.  And tears of hope.  And I prayed that as we all made this big—no, monumental—transition of starting school, that I could handle it with courage, grace, and a giant sprinkling of Christlike love.

Sending your baby off into the big, wide world is bittersweet.  It’s exciting.  Your kid now has the chance to make a stand—a stand for who he is, what he believes in, and what he wants to be.  But it’s also sad.  Your baby is growing up.  And while this is certainly not the end of your time as a mom—you can go ahead and trust me that your mom skills will be tested in the year to come as they’ve never have been before—it’s the end of an era of sorts.  And as you move out of the preschool era, you get to move into the big-kid era.

An era when your kid will grow and learn more than you ever imagined.

An era when your kid will (hopefully) solidify his trust in Christ.

An era when your kid will learn what faith and grace and hope truly mean.

And as you make this transition, I want to come beside you to share my stories.  My struggles.  My over-panicky moments.  So that you, too, can send your kid off into the big, wide world with the confidence he needs to thrive.

A note for my particularly scrupulous readers:  You may notice that all of the pronouns in this book are male.  This was a decision made by my editors and I in order to keep the copy simple and consistent.  It in no way means that that this book is more applicable to boys or that I intended the tips and advice in this book to be just for boys.  So, if you happen to have a daughter (like I do), please mentally substitute “her” for “him” and “she” for “he” as you read.  And then write a very serious letter to whoever invented the English language letting them know how much easier our lives would be if pronouns weren’t gender specific.

Chapter 1

Getting into the Big-Kid-Mama Groove

Surviving and Thriving as You Transition into the Grade School Years

It’s a little bit ironic that the first time (ever) that Joey slept past 6:00 a.m. was on his first day of kindergarten.

During Joey’s toddler and preschool years, I had literally tried every possible strategy to get Joey to sleep in.  We begged.  We pleaded.  We bribed him with chocolate chip pancakes on any day that he slept past seven.  Which never happened.  We even got one of those “Okay to Wake” clocks that glowed when it was okay for him to get up, which only resulted in him waking me up at five a.m. to check and see “if the clock was still working.”  It was.

Anyway, by the time Joey turned five, I had given up on turning him into a late sleeper.  We made a rule that he had to stay in bed—reading or whatnot—until the sun came up.  If he wanted to wake up at o’dark thirty and just lay there, then that was his prerogative.  And so he did, morning after morning, month after month, year after year.  Until that hot day in August when he had to go to school for the first time.  On that day, he decided to sleep in.  In fact, I had to drag him out of bed by 6:30 to make sure we made it to school on time.

The next day, he slept in again.

And on that Saturday morning, he slept until eight.  Eight in the morning!  And as he trudged down the stairs in all his bedheaded glory, he announced to me that now that he was in kindergarten, he was going to start sleeping like a teenager.  (Because, in case you’re wondering, teenagers sleep until eight.  Or something like that.)

I hate to be the one to break the news to you, but your kid is growing up. And that means your parenting is going to have to grow up a bit too.  You probably no longer have to worry that your kid is going to wake up at 4:42 a.m. and dump Cheerios all over your bed.  Or have a potty accident at playgroup.  Or have a meltdown in the middle of the Target aisle. (Unless, of course, a sugar-low coincides with a sale on sticker books, in which case all bets are off.)

Big-kid parenting is just different from baby or toddler parenting.  Where before you were vigilant, now you have to be strategic.  And where before you were black-and-white, now you can start to add some color to your parenting.  You can add some orange ideas here and a bright turquoise discipline choice there.  And before long, you’ll discover a whole rainbow of possibilities with your big kid.  Okay, enough with the cheesy metaphors—I’m sure you get it.  Your kid is bigger.  And that means you have to start parenting bigger too. I’ve written this book to help you do exactly that.  But first, here are a few tricks and tips to help you get into the big-kid-mama groove.

How to Get into the Big-Kid-Mama Groove [[A head]]

1. Think before you act. [[B head]]

Back in your toddler-mama days, you had to think fast.  Because if you didn’t make a diving leap in front of your kid as he walked toward the mud puddle, he was certainly going to find a way to get every drop of water from that puddle into some place that it didn’t belong.  But now your kid is a big kid.  And with that comes a measure of security.  You probably don’t have to worry that he’s going to touch the hot coals in the fireplace or smear sweet potato puree onto the underside of the couch cushions.  And, that security buys you time to think a bit before you act.  Nothing is as pressing as it was when your kid was small.

So what exactly does more-thinking, less-reacting parenting look like?  It means instead of jumping to reprimand or reward your kid, you spend some time thinking about the best way to approach each situation.  And—even more important—you allow your kid to spend time contemplating the best approach to each and every situation as well.  So instead of jumping to your kid’s rescue when he’s struggling to figure out how to put together his Legos, allow him the space to ask for help.  And when he misbehaves, don’t intervene immediately, but allow both of you some time to cool off and consider things.  Because the more you allow yourself—and your kid—to think, the more he’s going to learn and grow.

2.  Lean on God more than ever.  [[B head]]

Letting go is hard.  Remember that story I told you in the introduction about the day I dropped Joey off at kindergarten for the first time?  What I didn’t tell you is that after I pulled out of that parking lot, I had to pull my car over because I was crying so hard that I couldn’t see.  I sat there on the side of the road—within view of the school—and sobbed for a good twenty minutes.  Because my baby took my heart with him as he walked into that school.

My motherly instinct is to hold on—to cling to my children as if they are mine to hold and protect.  And while I know that God’s purposes for my children require independence, my mother’s heart still needs some convincing.  Because when my eyes see big kids—kids who are ready to face the big, wide world and all that comes with it—my heart still sees those tiny, precious babies that I once cradled in my arms.  Tiny babies who have grown up way too fast.

I know that I still have a lot more letting go to do—I can’t even imagine the tears I will shed when my tiny babies move on to middle school and then high school and—I don’t even want to think about it—college.  But now, while each tiny step feels like a rite of passage of its own, I’m learning to lean on Christ more than I ever have before. I cannot fulfill my job as a mother by clinging to my own understanding—because my human emotions and desires stand in the way of God’s bigger picture.  And only by turning to Christ will I teach my children that they, too, can turn to him as they grow.

3.  Rely on prayer. [[B head]]

I’m a fixer.  If I could, I’d like to pave the road for my kids with rainbows and cotton balls so that if they ever hit a snag, they’ll land on a cuddly cloud of softness.  (I’m sure Joey will love it when I talk like that when he’s a teenager.  Especially in front of his friends.)  Anyway, when Joey mentioned to me one day last year that a kid in his class—let’s call him Mr. Meanie Pants—had called him a “wimp” at school and refused to play with him at recess, I wanted to call up Mr. Meanie Pants’ mom and tell her exactly what I thought of her kid’s bully tactics.  That’d teach him to mess with my kid.

But I didn’t call because I knew that part of growing up is learning to do things on your own.  Well, that and I didn’t have Mr. Meanie Pants’ mom’s phone number.  Instead, I prayed.  I prayed that God would give Joey the insight to stand up for what is right.  I prayed that Joey would learn how to discern right from wrong on the playground without becoming a bully or a victim.  I prayed that I would know the words to say to help him learn important attributes like courage and kindness and respect.

I honestly don’t know what happened with Mr. Meanie Pants.  I have a feeling that by the time they hit the playground on the next day, both kids had probably forgotten about the incident and had moved on.  Because Joey never mentioned Mr. Meany Pants again in a negative light.

I have to say that the incident with Mr. Meany Pants taught me a valuable lesson.  (And no, it wasn’t that playground politics should be left on the playground, although that’s important too.)  I learned that while my mama-bear instincts might tell me to toss gumdrops and lollipops at my kids in order to make sure their days are happy, my Christian instinct should always be to turn toward prayer.  Because while I won’t always be able to fix things for my kids, I can always rely on God to stand in the gap for them.

4.  Make quality time a priority. [[B head]]

Once your kid starts school, those easy-breezy days when you had nothing to do but sit around in your pajamas and read the same stories over and over and over are, well, over.  And I’m telling you this because I know how much people love it when I state the obvious.  But also because I want to save you the embarrassment that will certainly come when your kid shows up at school and tells his teacher that he spent his summer eating Captain Crunch out of the box because “mommy didn’t have time to wash the spoons.”

Schooling takes time—and whether you send your kid to school or homeschool, the amount of free time you have to just hang out with your kid will certainly decrease.  But I’m a quality over quantity type of person.  I mean, think about it: would you rather have a whole bag of M&Ms or one really amazing piece of rich, expensive dark chocolate?  Okay, forget that analogy because the obvious answer is both.  But my point is that even if you don’t have a ton of time with your kid, you can still make that time count.

One thing I do is set aside after-school snack time as “us” time.  I whip up a from-scratch batch of chocolate chip cookies—okay, I feed him Goldfish crackers—and spend a half hour talking to him about his day.  I also try to do something fun as a family each weekend—go on a bike ride or go bowling—so there is something non-school and non-chore related that we can do together at least once every week.  Whatever we’re doing, I make it a point to spend quality time with my kids every day.  
Ready, Set, Invest [[Ahead]]

Throughout this book I hope to give you tips, ideas, and strategies to go beyond simply parenting your kids.  Because I know that’s simply not enough.  Instead, I want to help you invest in your kid’s Christian heritage—not their future success, their academic achievement, or that football scholarship that you’re hoping for—but in who your kids are in Christ.  Because the truth is, that as you send your kid out into the big, wide world, your ultimate goal is not that your kid will learn to stand on her own two feet but, instead, to learn to stand on the Rock.

[[ INSERT SIDEBAR HERE]]

Time-out for Mom

For When You’re Preparing Your Heart to Send Your Kids Out into the World

“Know therefore that the Lord your God is God; he is the faithful God, keeping his covenant of love to a thousand generations of those who love him and keep his commandments.” (Deuteronomy 7:9)

Heavenly Father, I am so grateful for your faithfulness!  I know that you have a covenant of love with your children, and that is such a comfort to me!  I am scared right now, Lord.  I am getting ready to send my baby away from the shelter of my nest and into the world.  Guide my words and my actions, Lord, so that I can prepare my child to be a servant, a disciple, and a follower of you.  Help him to shine bright in a dark world so that your love will be evident through everything he does.  Amen.

[[end sidebar]]

10 Things to Remember as You Send Your Kid Off into the Big, Wide World [[A head]]

There’s a reason that glitter glue and baby wipes were on your school supply list.  And it’s the same reason that you shouldn’t send your kid to school in the $80 blouse that your mother-in-law got her for Easter.
Make your kid memorize the following:  I will bring my lunch box home from school every day. Because there’s a hard-and-fast rule at my house that mommy doesn’t pick moldy carrot sticks out of lunch boxes.
Your kid may say he understands the book checkout system in the library.  He may even think he understands the book checkout system in the library.  But you should probably go over it again before the next class library day.  Because twenty confused kids equals one frustrated librarian and the chance that your kid won’t be able to check out the new Fly Guy book until next week.
“Because I said so” is a perfectly acceptable answer to the question, “Why can’t I bring my pet lizard to school?”  But that doesn’t mean your big kid won’t try to find out why exactly it’s such a bad idea for himself.
The desire to be clean apparently must develop post-elementary school.  So that battle you’ve been doing to get your kid to bathe, well, it will continue for the foreseeable future.
It’s still okay to kiss your kid goodbye.  Just do it quickly before his friends see.
Even if your kid can read to himself now, she will still love it when you read him a bedtime story.
Just because you pack kale chips and a sprouted hummus sandwich in your kid’s lunch, doesn’t mean he’s going to eat it.  Chances are—smarty pants that he is—he’ll find a way to swindle the girl next to him out of her Twinkie by saying that his quinoa bake is “a princess pie.”
Your kid is watching you.  And that means that your little meltdown over the fact that daddy is coming home late again will not only be stored in his little brain under “appropriate ways to react when frustrated,” but will also probably be reported in full detail to his teacher, friends, and guidance counselor tomorrow.
Your kid may be a big kid, but he still needs his mommy.  Make room for those gangly legs on your lap and give your kid the time and space just to be with you.  Because no kid is ever too big for mommy snuggles.  Except for maybe a teenager.

This Mom’s review coming soon

The Christian Mama’s Guide to Parenting a Toddler by Erin MacPherson

It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old…or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!

Today’s Wild Card author is:

and the book:

Thomas Nelson (April 9, 2013)
***Special thanks to Erin MacPherson for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

 Erin MacPherson is a mom of three who never does anything halfway. When she discovered she was pregnant she decided to write about it—but then kept writing. A former staff writer and editor for Nickelodeon, Erin now entertains parents on her personal blog as well as through freelance magazine articles, devotionals and speaking. She wants to come beside her readers not only as a confidant and Christian sister, but also as a best girlfriend who understands what daily life is all about.

Visit the author’s website.



SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:

The Christian Mama’s Guide to Parenting a Toddler:  What’s a mom to do when her sweet baby’s smiles and snuggles turn to tears and tantrums?

This take on everything toddler—from throwing food to potty training to massive toddler fits—is filled with sanity-saving advice every mom wants to hear. Helpful tips include how to:

  • stop a tantrum in its tracks (or at least survive the tantrum without breaking into tears of your own)
  • discipline your child in a way that demonstrates Christ’s redeeming love
  • make your marriage a priority when your kid is a squeaky wheel that always seems to need your time and attention
  • introduce your child to Jesus in a way that leads to authentic faith
  • convince a one-and-a-half year old that broccoli really is better than cookies—even if you don’t believe it yourself

Moms will be entertained and encouraged by the amusing anecdotes and godly advice of this comprehensive, topical approach to parenting one and two year olds.

Product Details:
List Price: $15.99
Paperback: 224 pages
Publisher: Thomas Nelson (April 9, 2013)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 084996475X
ISBN-13: 978-0849964756

AND NOW…THE FIRST CHAPTER:


Introduction

What Happened to My Sweet Baby?

Your baby is (or at least was) about as close to perfection as you’ll find this side of heaven. Those dreamy grins every time you walked into the room. The sweet melody of ba-ba-la-la-las in the baby monitor as you woke up each morning. Those moments when she snuggled close and fell asleep on your shoulder. Pure, sweet almost-perfection.

But recently, have you noticed something changing? Like those dreamy grins being replaced by snarls? And that sweet melody of ba-ba-la-la-las sounding an awful lot like, “No! Mine! No! No! No!”? And those snuggle-close-and-fall-asleep moments getting fewer and further between?

Just as you were getting that whole baby thing down pat, your kid decides to up and turn one-and-a-half on you. And suddenly, you’re afraid to go out in public because your kid might pitch a royal fit, but you don’t want to stay home because your kid might have a tantrum. You can’t go to restaurants (he might smoosh peas into the carpet) or to parks (he might hit someone) or to stores (he might climb the shelves). How do you survive?

I remember the day I realized that my son was in the terrible twos. We were at the park with the other moms in my MOPS group and Joey picked up a pebble (okay, it was a rock) and threw it at another kid. Gulp. After a very long (and very passionate) lecture on why rock throwing isn’t a nice thing to do, I was certain that Joey wouldn’t do it again. He was so contrite. And surely he hadn’t done it on purpose. He was only one! So I hugged my oh-so-sweet son tightly and sent him off to play. And, as soon as he escaped my grip, he smiled innocently at me, picked up another rock and threw it at the same kid. Harder this time. Uh oh. Helllllo terrible twos.

So, what now? How do you survive when your kid can’t make it through the day (okay, the minute) without throwing a massive tantrum? And what do you do when she thinks that a balanced diet should consist solely of mac & cheese and chocolate chips? And how do you discipline a kid who can’t understand the difference between “steal” and “share”? And how in the world can you go grocery shopping when your kid’s throwing toys out of the cart every twelve seconds as you stock up in the bulk-foods aisle?

It’s time to adjust your mama game plan. You can be the mom of a one-and-a-half-year-old and still go into public and come home (somewhat) sane. And you can love God, love your husband, and (yes) even love your fit-throwing, no-saying, rock-throwing kid while doing it. Here’s how.

A note for my particularly scrupulous readers:  You may notice that all of the pronouns in this book are male.  This was a decision made by my editors and I in order to keep the copy simple and consistent.  It in no way means that that this book is more applicable to boys or that I intended the tips and advice in this book to be just for boys.  So, if you happen to have a daughter (like I do), please mentally substitute “her” for “him” and “she” for “he” as you read. And then write a very serious letter to whoever invented the English language letting them know how much easier our lives would be if pronouns weren’t gender specific.

1

Getting into the Toddler Mama Groove

Surviving and Thriving in the Toddler Years

I took my one-and-a-half-year-old niece, Greta, to McDonalds a few days ago. I’m not sure if that makes me a bad Auntie (she’s asked for McNuggets for breakfast, lunch, and dinner every day since) or a cool Auntie (I let her get fries . . . shhhhh!)—but regardless, she loved it. And I did too. Except for one thing: Greta—adorable, sweet and precious Greta—is smack dab in the middle of the terrible twos.

We walked into the play area, and before I could set my tray on a table, Greta ran up to another kid who was putting on his shoes and shouted, “No! Mine!” Turns out Greta was under the impression that everything in the room belonged to her. The slide? Mine! The giant piano on the wall? Mine! The little baby that another woman was putting in a high chair? You guessed it. Mine! It was hilarious. And aside from having to remind Greta 15,324 times to be sweet, we had a wonderful time.

I told my sister-in-law the story and she wasn’t quite as amused. You see, Greta’s plunge from delectable baby to delectable-yet-exasperating toddler happened very quickly and very unexpectedly. One day, Greta was her normal sweet self—singing sleepily in her crib, eating whatever delicacy her mama put on her plate, and playing nicely with her cousins. The next day, Greta woke up a different kid. She whined. She said no. She threw her veggies on the floor. And she screamed “mine” at anyone and everyone who dared come within fifteen feet of one of her toys.

My sister-in-law is beyond frustrated—and rightfully so. I remember feeling the same way when my kids hit the terrible twos. Suddenly, all of my parenting skills were tested. All of the rules were changed. And all of my lovely walk-in-the-park moments were ruined by massive temper tantrums and whining fits. I realized I had to get my mama groove back because my sweet baby was no longer a sweet baby, and if we were being honest, I was no longer a sweet baby mama. I was a frustrated mama. And an annoyed mama. And the kind of mama who spent more time saying no to my kid than he spent saying no to everyone else. Which was a lot.

Being the parent of a one-and-a-half-year-old is overwhelming. Remember back in your new mama days when the mere thought of feeding and bathing and diapering a baby seemed overwhelming? Remember that? Well, now you’re an old pro. Being a toddler mama is a lot like that; it feels impossible at first. It seems like you’ll never be able to go to the mall—or church—again. But you’ll figure it out. And before long you’ll be able to handle a whiney meltdown while calmly filing your nails and sipping an espresso.

[[a header]]How to Get into the Toddler Mama Groove

[[b header]]1. Give yourself a break.

I’m a perfectionist, so I tend to think of my kids’ behavior as a direct reflection on me. And then, when my kid acts obnoxiously, I blame myself for being a terrible mother. But mama mantra #1345 begs to differ: you are not a terrible mother because your kid just smeared Desitin all over your mother-in-law’s antique quilt. Or hasn’t eaten anything besides peanut butter and Cheerios in nine days. Or just stole a toy from another kid at playgroup.

I’m not saying you shouldn’t deal with these issues—you should—but simply that you can’t be hard on yourself because your kid is having a bad day. Motherhood is hard, and no mom in the history of the entire world has been a perfect mama—no one. With that in mind, even in your worst mama moments, cut yourself some slack. God has used some of the hardest times I’ve had as a mom—times when I wasn’t sure if I would survive the day, much less eighteen years—to show me how to depend on Him. And in order for God to use these trials to help me learn and grow, I have to let go of them and give them to God. Only He can make our paths—and our children’s paths—straight.

[[b header]]2. Give yourself a time-out from your kid.

Sometimes you just need a time-out. I remember a day like that. My son Joey had thrown a huge fit in Target because I hadn’t bought him a chocolate milk (mean mommy, right?) and that had escalated to a hysterically whiney car ride and a full-on toy-throwing tantrum when we got home. I called my mom. She told me to bring him over to her house.

I vegged in front of the TV while she took him to play in the sandbox and read him books. He calmed down. I calmed down. And by the time I had to go home to make dinner, I was a different mama—calm, cool, collected, and totally in love with my adorable son. Whoever said that absence makes the heart grow fonder was almost certainly the mom of a one-and-a-half-year-old. I can be at my wit’s end but after just an hour away, be rushing home for a chubby-armed toddler hug.

So, on those can’t-get-through-five-minutes-without-an-issue days, don’t be afraid to call a friend, call your mother, call someone. No one can do it alone, and chances are that your mother or your sister or your best girlfriend would be happy to take your kid to McDonalds for an hour or two . . . and return them full of chicken nuggets and French fries.

[[b header]]3. Plan Your Days to Include Movement.

In the past, you may have been able to get by with lazing around all morning and spending the afternoon reading stories, but most toddlers are active and need a lot of activity. And by “need a lot of activity,” I mean that if you don’t make sure your kid runs around for at least two hours out of every day, you’re pretty much guaranteed a five-star meltdown at nap time and an eight-star fit at dinner.

So, for your sanity (and your kid’s), try to work some activity into every day. One of my favorite things to do with my kids is to go into the backyard and play soccer. They love it because it’s fun. I love it because it counts as exercise for them and for me—and because a couple of years ago, after a couple of weeks of backyard soccer practice, my husband commented on my “sexy soccer-player calves.” Let’s just say I became a regular soccer fiend after that. Even a quick walk to the park or around the neighborhood can burn some of that pent-up toddler energy, especially if you let your kid walk at her pace instead of yours. Of course, that means you won’t get anywhere quickly, but who cares? At least you’ll be able to inspect every single acorn you see along the way.

[[b header]]4. Pray. For Yourself.

I know you’re praying for your kid. Like all the time. But what about for yourself? It’s hard to be a good mama—especially when your kid isn’t exactly full of sugar and spice and everything nice. So pray for patience. Pray for wisdom. And pray that you’ll be able to reflect Christ’s love in your life even when you’re on your last nerve.

Time-out for Mom

For When You’re Praying For Yourself as a Mother

You have searched me, Lord,
    and you know me.
You know when I sit and when I rise;
    you perceive my thoughts from afar.
You discern my going out and my lying down;
    you are familiar with all my ways.
Before a word is on my tongue
    you, Lord, know it completely.
You hem me in behind and before,
    and you lay your hand upon me.
Such knowledge is too wonderful for me,
    too lofty for me to attain.  (Psalm 139:1-6)

Lord God, it is such an incredible thing that you—the creator of heaven and earth—know me personally.  You know my ever flaw, my every strength, my every thought and my every desire.  And so, I don’t have to tell you that I desperately love my children and want to do whatever it takes to raise them in a way that’s pleasing to you.  Lord, I need your help.  I cannot do it alone.  My human ways are weak—I grow impatient and selfish and angry.  But you are so much bigger than that and I pray that you fill me with your spirit so that I, in turn, can be like you.  Amen.

[[a header]]Toddler Dictionary

Just to get you started off right on your toddler mama journey, here’s a dictionary of common toddler words.

Bedtime [bed-tahym]: 1. The moment when—no matter how exhausted I’ve been all day—I suddenly feel wide-awake. 2. The moment when—no matter how much milk I left in my sippy cup at dinnertime—I suddenly feel extremely thirsty. 3. The moment when—no matter how independent I’ve felt all day—I suddenly feel extremely needy.

Binky [bing-k-ee]: (also known as: wubby, wubbalove, paci, pacifier) 1. The thing that—no matter how much my mom tries—I will refuse to go to bed without. 2. The thing that—no matter how much mom tries—I will refuse to leave the house without.

Broccoli [brok-uh-lee]: A green tree-like substance that should be immediately fed to the dog if placed on your highchair tray.

Chocolate milk [chaw-kuh-lit milk]: The only thing that will keep me from tossing a carton of eggs on the floor at the grocery store.

Crayon [krey-on, -uh n]: 1. The thing mom always puts in my hand when she wants me to be quiet at restaurants. 2. A tool for decorating walls, floors, and mom’s super-expensive antique coffee table. 3. A yummy snack.

Dog [dawg]: 1. The big thing lying on the floor that wants you to pull its tail. 2. Synonymous with “pony.”

Hair [hair]: A convenient place to wipe your hands after you’ve eaten mashed sweet potatoes or anything with maple syrup.

Mine [mahyn]: 1. Something that belongs to me. 2. Something that I want to belong to me. 3. Something that once belonged to me. 4. Something that I’ve seen before.

Park [pahrk]: 1. The place where I can run and scream as loud as I want and mom won’t tell me to stop. 2. The place where I will find unlimited amounts of gravel, rocks and dirt to roll in, get in my shoe, eat, and throw at other kids.

The Wiggles [th-uu wig-uh ls]: 1. The absolutely hilarious guys that mom—against her best judgment—introduced me to on that day that she was trying to answer sixty-two emails in one afternoon. 2. The fun concert that mom will—against her best judgment—take me to when they come to town. 3. The fun CD that mom will—against her best judgment—buy. 4. The fun CD that mom will—against her best judgment—play in the car CD player if I whine long enough.

Whine [wahyn]: 1. The noise you make when you really, really want something. 2. The noise you make when you really, really want something and mom says no. 3. The noise you make when you really, really want something and mom still keeps saying no. 4. The noise you make when you don’t remember what you wanted, but you know Mom will probably say no anyway.

Vegetable [vej-tuh-buh l]: A fun toy that mom puts on your dinner plate so you have something to throw during dinnertime.

[[a header]]Your Toddler is Fabulous (Even if She’s Fabulously Obnoxious at Times)

Even in the middle of the most hysterical, most obnoxious, most terrible one-and-a-half fit, if you look really, really close, your kid will still be pretty darn cute. That’s because your kid is a fabulously amazing (and independent) creation of God and even in the middle of her one-and-a-half-year-old glory, she is still pretty darn amazing.

The thing about the terrible twos is that they really aren’t that terrible. Sure, your kid acts terrible from time to time, but it’s because she is growing and learning and trying to figure out the world. And sometimes that figuring manifests itself as whining. And sometimes that growing manifests itself as fit-throwing. But in the middle of it all, God is working in your kid’s life, and you get the incredible privilege of getting a front-row seat to it all.

It’s easy to get frustrated with one-and-a-half-year-olds, but it’s also easy to love them for the real, honest, and utterly adorable children of God that they are. And with that in mind, let’s get on with our loving—and surviving—of the toddler years.

This Mom’s review coming soon…

The Christian Mama’s Guide to Baby’s First Year: Everything You Need to Know to Survive (and Love) Your First Year as a Mom by Erin MacPherson

It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old…or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!

Today’s Wild Card author is:

and the book:

Thomas Nelson (April 9, 2013)
***Special thanks to Erin MacPherson for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Erin MacPherson is a mom of three who never does anything halfway. When she discovered she was pregnant she decided to write about it—but then kept writing. A former staff writer and editor for Nickelodeon, Erin now entertains parents on her personal blog as well as through freelance magazine articles, devotionals and speaking. She wants to come beside her readers not only as a confidant and Christian sister, but also as a best girlfriend who understands what daily life is all about.

Visit the author’s website.

SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:

The Christian Mama’s Guide to Baby’s First Year:  An entertaining, practical guide for first-time mamas and those who need a baby refresher course.

The new mom initiation ritual involves sleepless nights, an inexplicable obsession with baby booties, and more questions than answers. This take on everything baby offers new moms the Christian girlfriend advice she needs to feel confident in her new role, including:

  • getting into the motherhood groove
  • breastfeeding advice
  • suggestions for losing the baby weight—before your baby is no longer a baby
  • time management tips that may just help you find time to do laundry—before you run out of clean underwear
  • how you can manage to be a godly mother and a good wife on less than three hours of sleep a night

Easy-to-read and relatable, this been-there-done-that guide answers these questions and more with a dose of humor an a lot of grace so that new moms can become the moms that God intended them to be during their baby’s first year.

Product Details:
List Price: $15.99

Paperback: 240 pages
Publisher: Thomas Nelson (April 9, 2013)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0849964741
ISBN-13: 978-0849964749

AND NOW…THE FIRST CHAPTER:

Welcome to Club Mom

Congratulations.  You (yes, you) are an official, card-carrying member of the greatest club of all: Club Mom.  And talk about an initiation ritual.  You just survived months of morning sickness, forty (plus) pounds of weight gain, and seventeen hours of labor and delivery.  Or, if you adopted, you trekked through seventy billion pages of paperwork, months of ups and downs and nail-biting nerves.  But you did it—and you did it all for that teeny, tiny, eight-ish pound baby that you already love more than anything in the world.

I was inducted into the club two days after Christmas in 2005 when my son, Josiah, was born.  And what a day that was!  I was exhausted.  And groggy.  And in pain.  But I was overjoyed.  My son was literally the most amazing, gorgeous, beautiful baby that had ever been born.  (Yours is too, right?)  And from that moment on, I knew that Club Mom was exactly the place I wanted to be.

Isn’t motherhood wonderful?  I certainly don’t need to tell you how fabulous your new baby is—but just for fun, let’s talk about your baby for a minute.  That downy-soft hair.  Big need-you eyes.  Chubby round cheeks.  Big ole potbelly.  Fat, delicious knees.  Tiny, stubby toes.  Amazing!  And adorable! And, best of all, knit together by the Creator of the Universe Himself with a very specific and wonderful purpose in mind.  No wonder you feel so awestruck every time you sneak into your baby’s nursery for one last goodnight kiss.

Of course, just because you’ve been initiated into Club Mom doesn’t mean you know what you’re doing.  I learned the hard way (read: through countless messy diaper blow-outs) that motherhood has a huge learning curve.  And nobody becomes a pro-mom—you know, the kind who carries a fully stocked diaper bag and manages to nurse her baby to sleep while picking up groceries—without practice . . . and some good, solid, mama-to-mama advice.

That’s why I’m here—to get you from the spit-up-covered, baggy-eyed mama that you are now—to the proud, camera-wielding, frosting-covered mama that you will be on your baby’s first birthday.  And what a journey it will be—in the next year, you’ll learn how to sleep while simultaneously spoon-feeding your baby tiny pieces of cheese and videoing your baby’s adorable lip smacking, how to remove yellow stains from expensive, grandma-purchased, white baby clothes, and how to puree food using nothing but a spoon and your own ingenuity.

Yes, in the next year, you’re going to learn a lot.  How to care for your baby.  How to be a godly mother.  And how to embrace the ups and downs of motherhood while maintaining some semblance of the hip person you really are.  As you can imagine, that’s not an easy thing to do—especially when you’re running on about three (interrupted) hours of sleep a night.

But, it is doable!  And you’re going to do great!  So welcome to the club.

A note for my particularly scrupulous readers:  You may notice that all of the pronouns in this book are male.  This was a decision made by my editors and I in order to keep the copy simple and consistent.  It in no way means that that this book is more applicable to boys or that I intended the tips and advice in this book to be just for boys.  So, if you happen to have a daughter (like I do), please mentally substitute “her” for “him” and “she” for “he” as you read.  And then write a very serious letter to whoever invented the English language letting them know how much easier our lives would be if pronouns weren’t gender specific.

Chapter 1

Getting Into the New Mama Groove

Surviving and Thriving as a New Mom

Being a new mom isn’t as easy as it looks.  I remember going to the grocery store when my son was a few months old and standing in line behind a woman who had three kids.  She stood there, thumbing through a magazine with her baby sleeping peacefully in a sling while her two older (and perfectly behaved) children sat quietly in the cart and quizzed each other on phonics.  Phonics.  No joke!  And to top it all off, the woman was wearing real pants (not sweats) and I think I spotted a smidgeon of mascara on her eyes.  My jaw dropped in awe.  How did she do that?

Meanwhile I stood there wearing a ratty, spit-up-covered T-shirt, my hair in a greasy pony tail, bouncing up and down in line while singing “Jesus Loves Me” to try to make my son stop screaming so that I could at least make it through the check-out line and buy milk.  And I wondered how I was ever going to be able to do normal things—like go to the grocery store or (gasp!) have a social life—without enduring a total meltdown (both the baby’s and mine).

Being a mom is hard.  Way back in the 1960s, two psychologists named Holmes and Rah decided to study the link between major life events and stress.  They did a bunch of research and interviewed a ton of people and came to the startling conclusion that major life changes—you know, like having a baby—are stressful.  Um, well, duh.

Of course having a new baby is stressful!  In a matter of minutes, you go from a fashionable, intelligent, and totally (okay, mostly) put-together woman to a blubbering, still-trying-to-lose-the-baby-weight mother who is exhausted, overwhelmed, and can’t figure out how to use the nasal aspirator.  It’s a huge life change—and most mamas (like me!) need some time to get the hang of it.

But you’ll get there.  Okay, so chances are you’ll probably never stand in line at the grocery store while your kid discusses the intricacies of phonics, but you’ll certainly get to the point where you can manage to put on real pants and buy milk without feeling like a bumbling fool.  I promise.

How to Get Into the New Mom Groove

1.  Give yourself a break.  Remember that seemingly perfect mom I told you about earlier in the chapter?  The one who managed to wear pants and mascara while wrangling three kids?  Well, fabulous as she is, you have to remember that she has three kids . . . which means she’s had a lot of practice.  I’m willing to bet that there was a point in time when she also stood in the grocery store with a screaming baby in her arms while covered in spit-up from head to toe.

You’re not going to have the mom thing down pat right away—or ever.  Case in point:  We flew from Texas to Oregon right around my son’s first birthday.  With a full year’s experience of being a mom under my belt, I had everything under control.  Or so I thought.  Right after we got on the plane, I realized that my son had a dirty diaper—and, of course, in the process of trying to change it on the cramped plane, I managed to completely soil his pants, his shirt ,and his sweater.  I reached for the diaper bag—only to realize that I had checked it.  I had nothing.  Well, nothing except for a naked baby on an airplane in December.

Every mom has a story like that—well, maybe not exactly like that, but I’m pretty sure every mom forgets to bring a change of clothes once or twice.  And when things happen that make us look inexperienced or clueless or just plain frazzled, we have to take it in stride.  Realize we’re doing the best we can.  And confidently ask everyone around us if we can please borrow a diaper.

2. Give yourself a break from baby. You heard me.  If you’re going to stay sane, you need to pry yourself away from your little schnookums every once in awhile.  I’m not telling you to go away on a four-week African safari, but it certainly wouldn’t hurt you to sneak out of the room while your baby is sleeping and take a shower.  Or, if you’re feeling really brave, you could leave your baby with your mom and go out to the Tastee Freez with your husband.

The point is that as wonderful as your baby is, you need some time to be you.  And seeing as how you weren’t always a brand-new mom with a brand-new baby attached to your hip, it’s good for you to pry that baby off of your hip every once in awhile and go back to being your fabulous self—give or take ten to fifteen pounds.

When my son was a few weeks old, my husband suggested (okay, demanded) that I leave the baby with him and go to the mall with my sister.  I whined and moaned and worried that something would happen.  But I eventually left.  And we had a great time.  We were only gone an hour or two (I was breast-feeding) but I remember feeling so liberated walking around carrying just my purse.  I felt like a real person again!

3.  Pace yourself. When you have a new baby in tow, there is no way you can do all the things you used to do back in the day.  That’s fine.  It’s okay that the house only gets vacuumed when your mother-in-law comes or that an entire day’s worth of activities constitutes a run to Target to buy diapers.  Yes, you headed up the world committee on organic gardening while holding down a full-time job and a seventy-hour-per-week volunteer ministry in your pre-baby days, but you just aren’t going to be able to do that now that you have kids.  And that’s okay.

The good news is that you’ll get back into your do-everything-and-volunteer-at-the-soup-kitchen-to-boot groove soon enough.  I remember feeling so incompetent when my son was a newborn.  I felt like nothing got accomplished at my house.  Ever.  But you know what?  My son didn’t stay a newborn and I didn’t stay a newborn mom forever.  Now I head the snack committee for my son’s football league and organize the class picnic and write the newsletter for my MOPS group.  And some days, I kind of miss those nostalgic new mom days when my only daily responsibility was making sure my son got fed.

4. Let your friends help. It takes a whole village—or at least an entire extended family and a church group—to raise a child.  And yet so many young mamas try to do it alone.  I remember being nervous when my friends offered to set up a CareCalendar (www.carecalendar.org) to bring me meals after my baby was born.  I didn’t want them to think I wasn’t capable—and I certainly didn’t want them to feel like they had to wait on me.  Of course they didn’t feel that way at all.  They wanted to help—just like I do when my friends have babies.

Here’s the way I look at it:  when you have a brand-new baby and are recovering from what was possibly a very traumatic labor, you need all the help you can get.  So accept whatever your friends and family offer you gratefully—and make a mental note to do the same when they need you.  And, the truth is, unless you’re still asking your friends to make you dinner and clean your house when your baby is ten months old, no one will feel like they’re waiting on you.  They love you.  They want to bless you.  And you’d do the same for them in a heartbeat.

5.  Try to maintain a sense of normalcy. Yes, your house is messy.  Yes, your clothes don’t fit.  Yes, you feel like a completely different person than you were before your baby was born.  But that doesn’t mean everything has to change.  Try to do one thing every day that the “old” you would’ve done—whether it’s obsessively de-cluttering the kitchen counter or simply putting on a coat of mascara.

When my son was a new baby, I made myself a little “get yourself together” schedule.  Okay, I didn’t call it that, but everyday I “scheduled” one household task or errand or job to do so that I felt like I had responsibilities outside of slouching on the couch with my boob in my son’s mouth while watching TLC.  Some of my jobs were easy—like reading the new issue of Parenting from cover to cover.  Others were a bit more difficult, like trying to figure out how to make the wipe-warmer actually keep wipes warm.

Time-out for Mom

For When You’re Just Getting Into the Swing of The New Mom Thing

 “He tends his flock like a shepherd: He gathers the lambs in his arms and carries them close to his heart; he gently leads those that have young.” (Isaiah 40:1)

Father God, What a blessing my new baby is.  There is nothing you could’ve given me that is more wonderful, more beautiful and more telling of your love.  Thank you.  And Lord, while my life has totally changed, thank you for dealing gently with me and showering me with your grace when I need it most.  Lead me, Lord God, so that I can raise this precious baby in a way that guides him to Your kingdom.  Amen.

Ways You’ve Changed Since Becoming a Mom

The old you: Wore cute, belly-hugging tops and styled your hair every single day without fail.
The new you: Has been wearing the same pajamas now for a week.  (To your defense, they’re really, really cute pajamas.)
The old you: Never missed an episode of Downton Abbey.
The new you: Never misses an episode of the Late, Late Show.  Ever.  (What else are you supposed to do when Lil’ Mr. Hungrypants is always wanting to eat at one am?)
The old you: Knew how to make a mean grilled cheese sandwich.
The new you: Has grilled cheese sandwiches for dinner.  Three times every week.
The old you: Skipped out on the super-long and boring HOA meeting because it was super-long and boring.
The new you: Wishes you could go to the super-long and boring HOA meeting (at least it’d get you out of the house) but can’t because it’s during your baby’s nap time.
The old you: Never had time to lunch with your girlfriends.
The new you: Lets your baby nap in the infant seat while you have lunch with your girlfriends who you haven’t seen for weeks.
The old you: Felt guilty if you went to bed without doing the dinner dishes.
The new you: Spends the entire day watching your sweet baby sleep—and is completely okay with the fact that the same cereal bowl has been sitting in the sink for a week.

Christian Mama Style

True story:  When I told my friend that I was writing a Christian pregnancy guide, she said, “Every pregnant mom experiences the same morning sickness and the same weight gain.  So why would I need a special pregnancy guide just for Christian moms?  Seems like any old pregnancy guide would say the exact same things.”

And she’s right—sort of.  Yes, every mom, Christian or not, shares similar experiences as she learns to navigate being a parent.  Every mom feels that intense I-will-never-be-able-to-get-over-how-amazing-you-are feeling while simultaneously freaking out about the fact that they are entirely and utterly responsible for the tiny life in their arms.  Us mama bears are fiercely protective of our babies—both physically and emotionally—and we’ll do anything and everything we can to make sure our babies are safe, healthy, and happy.  It’s human nature.

But what makes Christian moms different is that Christian moms also care deeply about our family’s relationship with Jesus along the way.  We want to grow closer to Jesus in this journey of parenthood and we want our kids to grow up to love Him with all of their hearts, their souls, and their minds.  And in the meantime we also want to teach our kids character, help them to grow rock-solid faiths, sow in them a joyful hope in Jesus, and help them to realize that while they are flawed human beings, they serve a God who is perfect yet forgiving and loving yet powerful.  A tall order.  But, before you really start to freak out (I know the very thought of that makes my mind start to whir with thoughts of my own unworthiness), I want to remind you that it is God who can and will work in your kid’s lives.  It is God who knit them together with a perfect plan in mind for their lives.  And it is God who will work to help that plan come into fruition.  Isn’t that a relief?

Of course, we as parents aren’t totally off the hook.  God calls us to love and nurture our children in the fear and admonition of the Lord.  And that starts from day one.  Yes, that’s right.  You can start teaching your baby about Jesus from the day he or she is born.  Here are a few easy ways to do just that.

Pray.  It’s probably a given that most Christian moms pray for their kids.  But, I also know what it’s like to be in that crazy newborn phase where there’s never enough time for basics like sleeping or showering.  And when I was in that phase, prayer time often got relegated to the back burner.  I want to encourage you to get in the habit of praying for your kids—and praying often.  One way I’ve found to be purposeful about prayer is to use Scripture to pray for your kids.  (The book Praying God’s Word for Your Life by Kathi Lipp has some great ideas on how to do this.)  I’ve spent the last six months reading the book of Ephesians and then using the words in that scripture to pray for my three kids. It’s been a powerful experience where God has revealed a lot to me about His plan for them.
Adjust your expectations.  One thing I had to learn as a new mom was that my time with Jesus was just different than before I had kids.  In my pre-kid days, I would often set aside extended periods of time every morning to pray and read my Bible.  If I needed more time with God, I could just set my alarm a little earlier.  But I think any mom will tell you that a baby is no match for an alarm clock and that it’s almost a guarantee that if you set an alarm for six am, your baby will wake up at ten to six.  Because of this, I had to learn to take mini-prayer breaks throughout the day as well as find alternative times (like during my baby’s nap) to read my Bible.
Sing songs.  I love the song “Change My Heart, Oh God,” so when my daughter was tiny, I would sit in my rocker, snuggle her against me, and sing that song over and over.  For months and months, that’s how she fell asleep.  And even now, more than four years later, she still sings that song, loudly and clearly, whenever she’s down or upset.  It’s become a comfort to her.
Set an example.  Get into the habit of spending thirty minutes each morning—at a time when your baby can see you and hear you—reading your Bible and praying.  Sure, a two-month-old isn’t going to know what’s going on, but as your baby grows and recognizes that Mommy spends time every day in the same spot, praying to God, he or she might be inspired to do the same.
Expose them to the Bible.  I get that busting out a King James Version with a six-month-old will probably only fly for fourteen seconds, but try giving your kids access to the Bible in age-appropriate chunks.  Point out a rainbow in the sky and talk about the story of Noah’s ark.  Read short Bible stories from a children’s Bible.  Talk about how God created everything we see in the world.  As your baby grows, these simple conversations will be woven in with experiences to become part of his spiritual legacy.

Being a Mom Rocks!

The truth is that being a mom is the best thing ever—regardless of how many diapers you’ve changed or how many times your baby woke you up last night.  Your baby is pretty much the most amazing thing that has happened to you.  And, aside from the fact that your life is a teensy bit nuttier than it’s ever been before, your life is also so much sweeter.  Nothing beats baby smiles, melodic gurgles. and chubby baby knees.   Nothing.

Plus, when you have a new baby, you feel like you’re a rock star.  Everywhere you go, people will point and ooh and ahh and try to get a glimpse underneath the baby blanket.  People will hold doors open for your baby stroller and give you advice on elevators.  People will strike up conversations with you, wistfully thinking about the days that their now-thirty-year-olds were that small.  And everyone—and I mean everyone—will marvel at how strong/smart/alert/quiet/sweet your baby is.

Even when things start to feel tough—like when your baby wakes you up seventeen times in the middle of the night and you’ve gone through an entire package of diapers in twenty-four hours—there’s nothing that will ever damper the feeling you have for that baby in your arms.  Nothing.  In my new mom days, I was completely in awe of my son and the love I felt for him.

Experiencing that kind of love showed me a lot about the love God has for us.  Of course, we could never love like He does, but just the experience of being a mom and loving a child made me overwhelmingly grateful.  In John 3:1, the bible tell us to ” For example, 1 John 3:1: “See what great love the Father has lavished on us, that we should be called children of God! And that is what we are!”  God loves me more than I could ever comprehend—yet holding my son for the first time, I got a glimpse of it.  What an amazing feeling.

Anyway, now that you have your mama groove, it’s time to talk about the nitty-gritty of newborn parenting.  How do you change your baby’s diaper without getting pee all over yourself?  How do you know when his cries are real or when he’s just working out a secret plan to keep you awake all night long?  And how in the world do you get those crazy (but adorable) button-up jumpsuits buttoned when your baby is squirming and wiggling?  Let’s find out.


This Mom’s Review:

Coming home with baby can be scary for a mom who doesn’t know what to expect or how to take care of that lil’ bundle of joy. The book covers caring for both mom and baby, with the baby section being thicker than the mom section.

My son is four months old. Although he is my third child, it’s been 14 years since I had a baby to care for, so I feel like a brand new mom. As I read through The Christian Mama’s Guide to Baby’s First Year, I learned so much that I wished I’d known the first four months and plenty more that I can put to use now and as baby boy gets older.

The best part of this book is that I felt like I had a friend to share in my trials and joys as a mother. Motherhood can be so lonely at times. Erin shared what worked or didn’t work for her with her three very different children. She wasn’t afraid to admit her fear of clipping her baby’s nails. She offered her advice on making baby food, something that I’ve wanted to try. If it’s something mom doesn’t want to do, then mom shouldn’t discount herself as a bad parent. Being one of those moms who doesn’t make her own baby food, Erin continued the section with step-by-step instructions for those moms who do want to try it. (I want to try, but let’s see if I am actually successful.)

Through the book are little pieces of Scripture with a prayer to guide mom through her baby raising days.

Enjoy!

The Christian Mama’s Guide to Having a Baby by Erin MacPherson

It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old…or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!

Today’s Wild Card author is:

and the book:

Thomas Nelson (April 9, 2013)
***Special thanks to Erin MacPherson for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

 Erin MacPherson is a mom of three who never does anything halfway. When she discovered she was pregnant she decided to write about it—but then kept writing. A former staff writer and editor for Nickelodeon, Erin now entertains parents on her personal blog as well as through freelance magazine articles, devotionals and speaking. She wants to come beside her readers not only as a confidant and Christian sister, but also as a best girlfriend who understands what daily life is all about.

Visit the author’s website.

SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:

The Christian Mama’s Guide to Having a Baby:  Everything you need to know about pregnancy—from weight gain to stretch marks to figuring out how to rely on Christ through the ups and downs of the next nine months.

This comprehensive guide is packed with information that every newly pregnant Christian mama needs—including:

  • help for pregnancy insomnia, morning sickness, weight gain and more
  • advice on how to maintain a godly attitude and outlook during pregnancy—even when you’re feeling anything but godly
  • what to expect from doctor check-ups, your encounters with the scale and labor and delivery
  • tips on how to survive food cravings, aversions, and even dreaded pregnancy exercise
  • healthy eating advice for pregnancy that doesn’t outright ban ice cream sundaes
  • ideas on how to keep your marriage a priority when you’re pregnant, including a guide for Christian dads-to-be and even pregnancy sex tips
  • This detailed guide takes you through each trimester with helpful tips, humorous accounts, and supportive spiritual advice–all with a girlfriend-to-girlfriend approach that will help moms feel comfortable as they navigate this life-changing time.

Product Details:
List Price: $15.99
Paperback: 304 pages
Publisher: Thomas Nelson (April 9, 2013)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0849964733
ISBN-13: 978-0849964732

AND NOW…THE FIRST CHAPTER:


Introduction

You’re Havin’ a Baby!

The fact that you’re reading this probably means you’re pregnant. Yep. You are pregnant. Has a nice ring to it, doesn’t it? If you thought your graduation day or your last birthday or even your wedding day was exciting and exhilarating and amazing, just wait until you hold your little bundle in your arms for the first time. The feeling is breathtaking. I get misty-eyed just thinking about it. That said, you have eight months (give or take) to wait before that misty-eyed moment, so don’t start packing your hospital bag yet.

I’ve always wondered how God created the heavens and the earth in seven short days and yet it takes nine long months to create a baby. Nine months. Seems like an eternity, doesn’t it? I remember getting so irritated when people told me that my pregnancies would pass in the twinkle of an eye. They swore that I’d be holding my baby before I knew it. That’s kind of hard to believe when you’re carrying around twenty (er, thirty) extra pounds and gagging every time you catch a whiff of someone else’s dinner.

But, really, your pregnancy will be over before you know it. In the meantime, you’re probably going to need some girlfriend-to-girlfriend advice to get you from point A—the miserable, exhausted, growing-by-the-minute, gagging, vomiting, and sweating point you’re most likely at right now, to point B—the glowing, ecstatic, sleep-deprived-but-you-don’t-care-at-all point that you’ll be at in less than forty weeks. And that’s why I wrote this book.

With my first pregnancy, the first thing I did after peeing on a stick was head to the bookstore to find a book that would keep me informed about what to expect (nausea, bloating, and night waking) and what not to expect (a glorious time where I could eat unlimited amounts of ice cream while my husband massaged my feet). Not surprisingly, there were oodles of choices; there were pregnancy guides for new moms-to-be, old moms-to-be, young moms-to-be, and tall moms-to-be. There were pregnancy guides for dads-to-be and grandparents-to-be and second-cousins-to-be. But, there was nothing for Christian moms-to-be. So, a few years later, I did what any somewhat sane mother-of-two would do. I wrote my own Christian pregnancy guide.

The good news is that I’m not going to bore you with medical jargon. It’s not that I don’t like medical jargon (when I was pregnant, I loved reading books that told me all about the medical feats that my body was performing while growing a baby), but I’m not a doctor. In fact, I don’t have any medical training at all (unless you count the fact that I took—and passed—health ed. in high school). So, if you’re looking for medical rhetoric and big-word-laden advice for a magical breakthrough that will quell your ever-present nausea and keep your weight gain to a minimum, this probably isn’t the place.

However, while my medical expertise stops at “take some Tylenol and go lie down,” I do have some pregnancy expertise. I’ve been pregnant twice. My sisters have all been pregnant. My friends have all been pregnant. Heck, a few months ago, my dog got pregnant. I’ve been surrounded by pregnancy non-stop for the past four years, and as I dealt with morning sickness and weight gain and decorating a nursery, I gleaned some pregnancy knowledge.

I also had horrible pregnancies. I know. I shouldn’t be saying that to new moms-to-be, but for the sake of honesty, I’m going to throw it out there. I went through the ringer during my first pregnancy and swore up and down that I would never, ever survive but that if by some miracle I did survive, I would never, ever, ever get pregnant again. Well, I survived. I fell in love with my baby and promptly got pregnant again. And you know what? I survived the second awful pregnancy too. And, if we’re being honest, I’d take a third pregnancy (and a fourth), God willing. In an instant.

You probably don’t want to hear this right now, but it is worth it. Every time you gag. Every time you throw-up into your mouth. Every pound you gain. Every sleepless night. All of it. It’s worth it. Just wait. I promise that nine months from now, you’re going to be emailing me and telling me I was right.

I won’t say I told you so.

1

Getting Into the Pregnancy Groove

Being Pregnant and Loving It

You figured out how to actually get pregnant (go you!), and now you have to figure out how to be pregnant. Contrary to popular belief, being pregnant isn’t as simple as remembering to take your prenatal vitamins, which is a feat unto itself. Pregnancy is exhausting, exciting, exhilarating, and stressful all at once, which means that you’re going to be exhausted, excited, exhilarated, and stressed for the next few months. Not an easy thing to be—especially when you’re gaining weight at a rate of three pounds per week.

I hate to even say this to a pregnant woman, but the next few months might not be the best months of your life. (Sorry!) I think my biggest misconception about pregnancy was that I expected it to be easy. I thought I’d be bubbling with baby-growing joy for the entire nine months. Maybe that’s true for some people, but it wasn’t the case for me. Pregnancy was hard. And stressful. And super annoying at times. And I wrestled with emotions that I’m embarrassed to even admit. (But we’ll get to that later.)

Interestingly, while I was trying to get a handle on the stress and emotions of pregnancy, I felt an overwhelming urge to draw closer to God. There’s something about impending motherhood that makes a girl really reflect on who she is and who she wants to be. I knew that my future children needed a godly mother, and I knew that I fell (far) short of the mark. This caused me to spend a lot of time reflecting on the characteristics of godly mothers and how I could become one.

As Christian women, we have to live up to a pretty high standard. The legendary Proverbs 31 woman is gracious and kind and long-suffering and probably never snapped at her husband for leaving dirty clothes on the floor. I’m not even close. I find myself living in a daily battle to live up to God’s standard for my life. I wake up praying that I’ll live with patience and integrity throughout the day . . . and find myself losing my cool before breakfast.

Yet, at one of the most stressful, emotional, and trying times of my life (my first pregnancy), God drew me closer to Him. I actually felt His presence as I spent time praying and reflecting on my baby and my future as a mother. It’s comforting to hear His voice in a time of need and feel His presence when you’re feeling your worst. And, hearing God’s voice (and knowing he’s there) is great motivation to have a godly attitude throughout pregnancy.

Of course, I was still the same old girl who couldn’t seem to make it to breakfast without losing patience about something. (Have I mentioned the dirty laundry that is always left on the bathroom floor?) Still, God did show me that purposefully choosing to have a godly attitude resulted in me feeling closer to Him. That, in turn, allowed me to have a more gracious attitude about my pregnancies.

Sounds a bit trite, doesn’t it? I mean, if it was all about choosing to smile through any situation, then every day would be gumdrops and Preggie Pops, right? Not exactly. But God does call us to be content in any circumstance (even morning sickness!), which means choosing to focus on the reasons we have to be grateful, even when it’s tempting to be grumpy.

And trust me, when I was pregnant, I had lots of reasons to be grumpy. But, I did strive to have an attitude of gratitude about my pregnancy. Here’s how I did (and didn’t) do it.

[[a header]]How to Get into the Pregnancy Groove

[[b header]]1. Get Yourself Pumped Up

When I first got pregnant, I was giddy with excitement. And who wouldn’t be? I was going to have a baby. I couldn’t stop thinking (or talking) about it. But then I got tired. And sick. And bloated. And suddenly I wasn’t so giddy anymore. In fact, once those pregnancy symptoms kicked in, I turned into a whiney, moaning, self-pitying mess. I resented my baby for making me feel so bad and resented everyone else because they didn’t feel as bad as I did. I resented my job because I had to go to it. I resented my husband because he could sleep and I couldn’t. I even resented my dog because she could spend the entire day basking in the sunshine while I had to actually get up and function.

So, how exactly do you start thinking about rainbows and baby booties when you’ve spent weeks hugging the toilet bowl? One thing I did was immerse myself in babyland. I bought books about pregnancies and babies. I hung out with friends who had babies. I oogled over baby gear on the Internet and rented funny movies about babies and watched them over and over. The only thing I didn’t do was volunteer to babysit, because that would’ve taken way more energy than I had at that point. But if you’re feeling up to dirty diapers and peek-a-boo, then go for it.

The point is, the more time you spend around babies (and other mothers), the more excited you will be about your own baby. And trust me, the only thing in the world that is worth nine months of pregnancy is a baby . . . and you’re getting one. So hop on board the baby train (I don’t have to tell you twice, do I?) and start living baby.

[[b header]]2. Turn that Mommy Guilt into Glee (Or at Least Contentment)

That resentment I felt because I was sick, tired, and fat quickly turned to guilt. I felt guilty for resenting my baby, who was supposed to be my pride and joy. I felt guilty for resenting my husband, who was honestly trying to help me as much as he could. Mostly, I felt guilty that I wasn’t thrilled to be pregnant.

I started to wonder if God didn’t approve of my pregnancy and my baby. Crazy talk, right? I know that now, but at the time, I felt so awful and so confused that I started to doubt God’s providence. Of course, once I realized—duh!—that God blessed me with the pregnancy, I wanted to be grateful to Him regardless of how I was feeling. God wants us to be content in our pregnancies, even when we’re not feeling good. Tough job, huh?

It was a long, uphill battle for me. And I had to constantly remind myself of God’s grace and mercy. But in the midst of the battle, God taught me many lessons I wouldn’t have otherwise learned: how to depend on others, how to trust, and what it means to truly depend on God for strength.

[[b header]]3. Pray for Your Baby

Another way to get into the pregnancy groove is to start praying for your baby in-utero. Sounds obvious, right? Well, it wasn’t for me. (I was tired and sick, okay?) It took me several weeks of pregnancy to start praying for my son. I was so stunned and overwhelmed by the idea of being pregnant that the idea of praying for my baby didn’t cross my mind. One day, one of the girls in my small-group Bible study mentioned that she had prayed for her baby throughout her pregnancy and suddenly the light went on. I wanted to pray for my unborn child too!

I could go into the mushy details about how my husband and I lay in bed and put our hands on my slightly protruding tummy and prayed for our son, but I’m sure you get it. In fact, you’ve probably been praying for your baby since the moment you found out you were pregnant. But, just in case there’s another woman out there like me who didn’t think of it, I thought I’d mention it.

[[b header]]4. Think About the Pros of Pregnancy

There are some (okay, lots of) wonderful things about pregnancy. What other time in your life do you have free license to eat extra calories, sleep late, and buy baby clothes without reservation?

Plus, when you’re pregnant, everyone (and I mean everyone) gushes over you. I remember walking into church as I was just starting to show. Two of the guys in our Sunday school class ran to grab me a chair. My husband got me water and my girlfriend brought me muffins from the class next door. They had blueberry crumble! Everyone oohed and aahhhed. Part of me hated all of the fuss—uh, who am I kidding? I loved the attention! Who wouldn’t?

But aside from the minor benefits, when you’re pregnant, it’s easy to dwell on all of the things you’re missing out on. You can’t eat sushi. You can’t wear your favorite pencil skirt. Your bras are all too small, and you’re too tired to stay up late watching chick flicks with your hubby (as if that happened before). I remember bursting into tears in the middle of our church group’s Christmas party because the eggnog was made from raw eggs and I was a little uneasy about exposing my unborn child to salmonella. I actually sobbed. Totally irrational, I know (especially considering the fact that there were a million other drink options at the party), but I felt so deprived.

The thing is, pregnancy isn’t about deprivation. Sure, there are things you shouldn’t and can’t do, but there is also one huge thing that you can do: nurture your own child inside of you. What an incredible privilege. I’m sure some of our husbands are secretly envious of us that we get to do it and they don’t! How else can we account for their sympathy weight gain?

The best way to get out of a pregnancy funk is to think about the reason for the pregnancy. I know that sounds obvious, but focus on your baby. Focus on the privilege. It’ll help you to forget the pain. And if that doesn’t work, think of all of the things that you can get away with during this brief period of your life.

[[a header]]Things You Can Do While Pregnant (That You Would Never Get Away with Otherwise)

Wear flip-flops or clogs every day. Even to church.
Leave the toilet unscrubbed for the entire nine months (might as well make it an even ten).
Order dessert (and eat it all by yourself).
Wear sweats to the grocery store, to work, and to dinner at your mother-in-law’s.
Skip your morning shower. Three days in a row.
Add half-and-half to your decaf (or half-caf).
Send your hubby to Sonic for a foot-long hot dog at 11 p.m.
Eat a foot-long hot dog at 11 p.m and wash it down with Chunky Monkey.
Go to bed at 7 p.m. on a Friday night.
Spend your entire Saturday camped out on the couch watching “A Baby Story.”
Borrow your husband’s t-shirts.
Chat about baby names on a baby names message board.
Go to Babies R Us and camp out in one of their rockers for an entire afternoon. You probably need to test it out so go ahead and take a nap if you’d like.
[[a header]]Pregnancy Rocks (Even Though It Sometimes Stinks)

The fact is, in spite of all of the nausea, bloating, and constant peeing, there’s also an ecstatic, blissful, giddy joy that comes from the fact that you have a baby growing inside of you. It’s amazing. And no matter how bad you feel, you can still cling to that. I remember being hunched over the toilet puking up my guts and thinking to myself how amazing it was that there was a tiny life growing inside of me.

It’s okay to be a little ambivalent, depressed, scared, worried, nervous, angry, irritated, or annoyed by your pregnancy. Feeling that way is natural. And feeling that way about your pregnancy has nothing to do with how you’re feeling about your baby. Of course you love your baby! But you don’t have to love pregnancy to love your baby. Just because you’re thrilled to be pregnant, you don’t have to ignore all the aches and pains and annoyances.

So, enough pep talking . . . you’re ready, right? Time to get down to the nitty-gritty. What are the next nine months really going to be like? What can you do to combat morning sickness? And bloating? And the rest of those icky pregnancy symptoms? And, perhaps most importantly, how much longer (in minutes) are you going to be able to fit into your favorite pre-pregnancy jeans? Let’s talk first trimesters.

This Mom’s Review coming soon…

Moms Raising Sons to Be Men

Moms Raising Sons to Be Men

It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old…or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!

Today’s Wild Card author is:

and the book:

Harvest House Publishers (March 1, 2013)
***Special thanks to Ginger Chen for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Rhonda Stoppe is a popular speaker who fervently imparts the truth of God’s Word to her audience. She is an enthusiastic communicator who unfolds Scripture with a contagious passion for truth as she teaches women to connect with God in an intimate “love walk” of obedience and to live deliberately in their purpose. She and her pastor husband, Steve, are the grateful parents
of four grown kids.

Visit the author’s website.

SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:

Mothers of boys have the special calling to shape future men of God. Popular speaker Rhonda Stoppe, mom to two sons, knows this opportunity is a challenge, a joy, and probably the most important work of a woman’s life. Drawing from years of ministering to youth and to women and from her own parenting experience, Rhonda provides refreshingly relevant guidance, biblical and contemporary examples, and humorous insights to help each reader discover

  • how to guide a son without hovering and smothering
  • how every action and choice can serve a godly goal
  • ways to communicate so a boy will listen and be heard
  • God’s power and grace to become–and give–her best

Packed with practical help from parenting experts and other moms, this inspirational resource will revive the faithfulness and fortitude a woman needs to partner with God as they shape the character and heart of a future godly man.

Product Details:
List Price: $12.99
Paperback: 224 pages
Publisher: Harvest House Publishers (March 1, 2013)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0736949771
ISBN-13: 978-0736949774

AND NOW…THE FIRST CHAPTER:


You Are Not Alone

On Mission with God

To be the mother of a son is not for the faint of heart. I remember when my son Brandon was born. Looking into his little face, the feelings within me were somehow different from four years earlier when I had given birth to my daughter. I felt so inadequate as I weighed the responsibility of molding this baby into a man. Up to this point, raising a girl had not been a difficult challenge. It was clear that she was like me, with all the love for being a girl that she could express. She loved shoes and colorful bows for her hair. She was extremely social and adored her friends. And her daddy? Oh, she loved her daddy. Yes, relating to her had been no problem at all.

Yet now in my arms I was holding a helpless baby boy who would grow into a man. Even the mere task of changing his diaper was intimidating with his recently circumcised appendage. I remember thinking, I cannot imagine that soft little face one day having whiskers. As I studied his hands so tiny and fragile, I thought of how they may one day be rough and calloused like his father’s.

When you gave birth to your son, did you find yourself imagining what kind of man he might become? When it came to my son, I did not want to raise a momma’s boy, yet I wanted to be his protector. I did not want him to be rough and reckless, but I did want him to be strong. I wanted him to become a wonderful, godly man like his father. After I took the little guy home and began to raise him, I found my parenting overshadowed with a fear of doing it wrong. I gradually developed a sort of reactionary mode—he acted and I reacted. Rather than following a clear path toward shaping his life, the fear of what I did not want my son to be became my standard. I was merely putting out fires rather than kindling the flames of my son’s character.

My husband and I had always wanted our home to be a place of peace, and yet I found in reality it had become a chaotic environment ruled by my emotions. Because I did not want to disappoint my husband, I did not let him know how much I was struggling. The day my daughter said to me, “I know you can’t wait until we are grown up so that you can do whatever you want” was the day that I knew I needed to get some help. It broke my heart that I had given her that notion. I loved being a mother; it was what I wanted to do. Yet in my harried frustration, that was not at all the impression I had given my sweet little girl.

Feeling even more inadequate and alone, I began to read books about parenting, from which I compiled a sort of how-to list. I soon discovered that the list did not have the power to change me. It became a burdensome reminder of the standard I was unable to measure up to. I lacked fortitude for this new adventure. I knew that I needed to become a kind, courageous, and confident mother if I was ever going to raise kind, courageous, confident children. I desired to be a godly mother who raised godly children. But where would I find the direction I so desperately longed for?

I Need Help, Lord!

Reading books had given me some basic ground rules for this new playing field, but I also wanted to learn from real-life examples. My mother-in-law, who had raised two wonderful sons, had been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease and was no longer the vibrant help she had been when my daughter was born. The young mothers I knew seemed no more prepared for raising a son than I was. I had no idea how to ask God for what I needed. I felt alone and desperate for answers. I’ve since learned that one of God’s favorite prayers is that of a simple cry for help flowing from a humble and desperate heart. I was both humbled and desperate as I uttered the plea, “I need help, Lord.” God graciously answered my prayer by bringing several older, godly women into my life. I am now 50, and I have to laugh at how old they seemed to me when I was in my twenties. These women were not scholars or trained in child development. As mothers of sons, they had traveled down this path ahead of me. They had insights and understanding into what I was experiencing. Their lives had not been perfect or free from trials. They were genuine, precious, and vulnerable as they taught me what God had taught them. When I shared my struggles I did not feel judged; rather, I felt loved.

Titus 2:4 instructs older women to admonish younger women how to love their husbands and their children, and this group of women wholeheartedly obeyed that command. Of all the friendships I have had, the relationships that developed with these women have by far been the most pivotal in my life. They taught me not only how to parent, but how to become the mother God wanted me to become. In writing this book, my heart’s desire is to be an older woman God can use to pour courage and confidence into you, just as those women did for me.

The Mission of Motherhood

One life-changing insight I received from these wonderful women was that I had been called by God to the mission of motherhood. And so have you. God has called you to join Him in the work He plans to do in your children. To become the instrument God will use to train your son somehow sheds glorious light on the unique ministry of motherhood, doesn’t it? The Bible instructs God’s servants to “take heed to the ministry which you have received in the Lord, that you may fulfill it” (Colossians 4:17). There is no pass. No get-out-of-jail free card. Your ministry came in the form of your son. How will you prepare yourself for that ministry? God never intended mothers to go it alone. Through His Word, He wants to equip you to train your children to love and trust Him.

As you follow God in molding the character of your son, you will undoubtedly face situations that are out of your control. It should come as no surprise that life is unpredictable. The Bible warns, “Do not think it strange concerning the fiery trial which is to try you, as though some strange thing happened to you”  (1 Peter 3:12). When you face struggles, yielding your emotions to the roller coaster of circumstances will only add to the stress and result in chaos.

As you parent your children, if your focus is on every turn of events, you will certainly be overwhelmed and afraid. Fear and confusion will rob you of courage. By contrast, focusing on God and resting in His character will bring peace. Rather than subjecting your family to the gyrations of your emotional reactions, you can develop the habit of responding with an unwavering confidence in who God is. Knowing God intimately is a vital attribute of being a godly mother. How does one develop that kind of confidence in God? I looked to these older women for answers, and they directed me to the Bible.

When I spent time with these women, I observed their peaceful responses to the chaos of life. They displayed a resolve to seek after the Lord in every situation. They were not just church ladies who did good things for God; their hearts reflected His heart. They were by no means perfect, but they were genuine. Their lives had not been without trials and heartache; each had their own story of the struggles they had faithfully endured. In my estimation, the greatest measure of their parenting success was their sons’ genuine love for them and for the Lord.

The Crossroad

I found myself at a crossroad when the women encouraged me to attend their ladies’ Bible study. Honestly, my motivation was, “Free babysitting and two hours with grown-ups? I’m in!” Totally spiritual, right? During the first class session I was given a homework book. I thought, Homework? No problem. I had gone to Christian schools; I can fill in the blanks without even having to look up the verses. I know, my response was arrogant. I was arrogant! (God would reveal that to me later, but that is a topic for another chapter.)

When I got home and opened the book, I was blown away by how much work I had to do. This was not the typical fill-in-the-blank book. This was a Precept Ministries International Bible study  that assigned five hours of homework each week. Evidently my new friends were under the impression that I had time on my hands. There was no way I could do that much homework! I concluded that these women had their children so long ago they had forgotten how much was needed to care for a baby. When I called my friend Gayle to explain I couldn’t possibly keep up with the class, she kindly encouraged me to hang in there for just one semester. She offered to help me by babysitting, and promised that I would be forever changed by the experience. I reluctantly agreed to her offer because I did not want her to think I was not spiritual.

I kept the study book open on my kitchen table and worked on the assignments a little bit at a time. I studied while nursing, and in between changing diapers and folding laundry. Do you know what I found? For the first time in my life, I began to crave the Word of God. I looked forward to my few minutes of open time here and there to learn from Him. I began to be transformed by the renewing of my mind (Romans 12:2). My thinking was different. My parenting was different. Life’s experiences were being filtered through God’s truth, and that truth was changing who I was.

Even my husband, Steve, noticed the change. Fear was replaced with peace, anxiety with confidence. My propensity to people pleasing was overshadowed by a genuine desire to please God. I had given my heart to Christ when I was young, but had never before experienced this kind of longing to know Him. Up till now I had always viewed reading the Bible as a religious duty. But this was very different from duty. I was hungry for God and His Word. I was developing an unwavering resolve to seek God.

What about you—do you long to seek after God? Are you hungering after His Word, and eager to cultivate a deeper personal relationship with the One who created you, knows your heart better than anyone else, and provides for your every need?

Or perhaps as you’re reading this you realize you’ve never taken that step to receive Christ as your Savior and Lord. Or maybe you’re uncertain as to whether you are a Christian. If you would like to know more about how to give your heart to Christ and have an intimate relationship with Him, please see the appendix, “How to Have a Relationship with Jesus.”

Resolve to Seek God

So what does this resolve look like—this hungering and thirsting after God? In the Bible I read a passage that spoke what my heart longed to express: “My heart is steadfast, O God, my heart is steadfast” (Psalm 57:7). When I read that, I felt I had to know more about the person who penned that phrase! Those words were written by David amidst one of the greatest trials of his young life. Oh yes, I wanted to know more about this man David. What kind of woman had raised a son like this? I wanted to live how he lived, and even more, I wanted to raise my son to be like him.

David, while not without his faults, was devoted to seeking God. In Psalm 89:20, God proclaimed, “I have found My servant David…” Note that God said He found David. Elsewhere in Scripture we read that “the eyes of the LORD run to and fro throughout the whole earth, to show Himself strong on behalf of those whose heart is loyal to Him” (2 Chronicles 16:9). Can you picture that? The eyes of God moving all across the earth in search of individuals whose hearts are loyal to Him. Why? So that He can show Himself mighty on their behalf. Isn’t that exciting? You don’t have to do this mother thing alone. God stands ready to offer you His strength. He is more concerned about the man your son becomes than you are!

Learning to love God will make your heart loyal to Him. When I say this, I’m not talking about being a religious woman—that is, someone who merely goes through the motions of religious duty and rituals in the hopes that you can somehow earn God’s favor. No, I’m talking about genuine change that starts in the heart and draws upon God’s power and wisdom. I’m talking about a true inner love and passion for God and not mere external behavior that might look good to others but amounts to nothing more than hollow actions. The loyalty God seeks comes from the heart.

The Holy Spirit can use your loyal heart to draw your son to know and obey God. If your faith isn’t authentic, your son will know it, and that will likely turn him away from the things of God. It is only as you truly love God and surrender to His perfect will that you are enabled to live as an example to your son and make God attractive to him.

I Surrender All?

David was willing to do anything God asked of him. God said, “I have found David the son of Jesse, a man after My own heart, who will do all My will” (Acts 13:22). As David was growing up, he expressed his love for God in his psalms of worship. Out of that love grew trust. When David was just a young shepherd boy God allowed him to experience circumstances that would help to build that trust and to give him courage for the trials that he would face in the future. In the course of guarding the family sheep,
Run away in fear
Question God’s goodness, and become bitter or angry
Rely on the power of God to persevere and know victory

Relying on God’s strength, David chose to stay and fight. His conquest over the lion and the bear prepared him to later fight a God-blaspheming giant who had taunted the Israelite army (1 Samuel 17:36-37). Does David’s kind of surrender of his life to God scare you? You can be honest with God; He already knows your thoughts. As a young mother, I had a deep-seated fear that if I surrendered my children to the Lord, He would test my loyalty by taking them from me. Have you ever struggled with such fears? The Bible can calm your heart as you learn that God is a loving and merciful Father. There is no reason to fear what God might do, for His love for your son is greater than any love you have. And His plans for your son are greater than your plans. What’s more, God has the power to accomplish those plans.

Practical Applications from David’s Mother

Have you ever asked yourself where David’s momma was while he was out there camping with the sheep and wrestling wild animals? Well, she wasn’t there fighting his battles for him. We can learn a lot from David’s mom.

She allowed her boy to become a man while he was still living at home. David was her youngest son, yet she allowed him to leave the safety of home to do the dangerous work of a shepherd. She recognized David would find a sense of accomplishment in contributing to the family business. What kind of man might he have been if his mother’s fears kept him tied to her apron strings? She seemed to know when to step back and allow him to face challenges without micromanaging his choices.

It can be frightening to loosen your grip on your son as he matures. All too often mothers coddle their sons in an attempt to protect them or make life easier for them, only to cripple their ability to manage themselves when they leave the safety of their homes. Making a conscious effort to allow and even orchestrate opportunities for your son to accomplish tasks away from your watchful eye will allow him to develop his courage and his ability to make decisions.

She had the courage to leave his safety in the hands of God. In those lonely hours spent on the hillsides, David learned how to be a man. God had used trials to develop his loyal heart. David’s mother seemed to have resisted the temptation to rescue him at every turn. The Bible says, “Trust in the LORD with all your heart, and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct your paths” (Proverbs 3:5-6). The Lord wants to be involved in your parenting decisions moment by moment. As you trust and acknowledge Him at each turn, He will make your path straight. If you rely on your own understanding and fight every battle for your son, how will he learn to rely on God’s strength? Sometimes God will ask you to let your little boy battle that bear. Are you willing?

She respected her husband’s wisdom. When David was a teenager His father, Jesse, sent him to the battlefront with food for his older brothers. You don’t hear David’s mother protesting, “Not my baby! He is too young to go.”

Over the years there have been many times that my husband has given one of our boys a responsibility that I thought was too much for him. My initial instinct was to come to the boy’s defense and explain why my husband was making a wrong decision. More often than not, I was the one in the wrong. I had to learn that my husband, who was a man, had more discernment with regard to what our sons could and couldn’t handle. (By the way, if your son does not have a father, do not despair; we will discuss that later in this book.)

David’s mother raised a man after God’s heart. Do you want to do the same with your son? What kind of mother might you be if you resolved to seek after God more diligently? How would your surrendered life affect your son’s character development?

A Courageous Mother

Moses is another man who was used greatly by God. Who was his mother? Jochebed found herself in a troubled time in Israel’s history. The descendants of Jacob had become slaves in Egypt. The slaves grew so great in number that the Egyptians became fearful. So Pharaoh sent out a proclamation that the Hebrew midwives should kill every baby boy born to the Hebrew women.

At the risk of losing their own lives, two courageous midwives, Shiphrah and Puah, refused to murder the babies. Eventually the frustrated Pharaoh decreed that all the Egyptians throw newborn Hebrew boys into the river, but keep the daughters alive (Exodus 1:15-17).

A Difficult Dilemma

When Jochebed and her husband, Amram, gave birth to Moses, they did their best to hide their lovely son for as long as they could. By the time Moses was three months old, however, it would have been a matter of time before someone found and killed him. Something had to be done, or surely he would end up dying (Exodus 1:15–2:10; Hebrews 11:23).

I can only imagine the ache in Jochebed’s heart as she carefully wrapped her precious baby boy in her favorite blanket. As tears streamed down her face, would she have attempted a brave smile into his little face? As if to somehow give him the courage she may desperately have needed for herself ?

As Jochebed prepared to place Moses in a basket upon the Nile River, her daughter, who was standing nearby, would likely have questioned the rationale of her mother’s plan. “You’re gonna put him in that basket, Mother? Will it float? What if water leaks in? What about the snakes and crocodiles?” Surely Jochebed had already asked herself these questions as well. Could this really be Jehovah’s answer to her prayer to save her son? She must have been confident her idea was from the Lord to even attempt the plan. And yet, would she end up wavering in her conviction as she prepared to send her son afloat on the Nile River? Try to put yourself in Jochebed’s sandals. I don’t know about you, but three months after my son was born I was still a hormonal, emotional mess! Trying to cope with hiding my newborn from people who wanted to kill him—coupled with the anxiety of trying to silence him each time he cried—would have sent me over the edge!

A Complete Trust in God

I am in awe of Jochebed’s composure here. Rather than ranting and raving to Amram about their difficult situation, which I am ashamed to say would have been my default mode, she carefully built a little ark for her son. Instead of running to each of her girlfriends for advice, she quietly acted on the plan that God had put in her heart. Can you just hear how her friends might have responded if she had solicited their advice? First you have the nay-sayers: “Jochebed, that is a crazy plan. The baby will surely drown, and if not drown, he will get eaten by crocodiles. Wouldn’t you prefer to know for certain what happens to him?” Then there would have been the hopeless: “Your plan will never work, Jochebed. Just give up. God doesn’t care about your baby. He didn’t care about mine when the soldiers came and killed him. Why are you any different? If the soldiers catch you with that baby, surely you will be put to death. What will become of your other children? You have a responsibility to them.”

Although advice is often practical, sometimes our friends can practical us right into disobeying the Lord. Have you ever experienced the Lord impressing upon you to do something that others have questioned? I have, and in such times, it can be confusing to discern what the right path is.

How puzzled the people in Jochebed’s generation must have been. God had called Israel His chosen people, yet He allowed them to suffer greatly. How is it possible to place your trust in God when your circumstances appear to be wildly out of His control? But we know there were some people who still trusted God. Among them were the midwives who, at great risk, chose to protect the Hebrew babies. Where did they find the courage to disobey Pharaoh’s decree? And where did Jochebed find the strength to do something about her circumstances?

If you were in this terrible scenario, how do you think you would have responded? My natural tendency would likely have been to pull blankets over my head and wait for things to get better. How could Jochebed ever have brought herself to let go of the little basket? Do you think you could have sent your baby boy down the Nile River? Imagine watching him float out of your secure hands into the unknown. Where would a mother find the courage to do such a thing?

A Miraculous Intervention from God

As Jochebed watched her baby float away, she demonstrated courage that was not found in her ability to preserve the life of her young son. Her decision that day required she follow a plan that had no answers. Yet she sent the baby away from her protection and into the care of her God. That kind of courage comes only in the life of one who has developed a genuine trust in God. Jochebed’s confidence in the Lord was evident in her actions.

If Jochebed had tightened her grip on baby Moses and attempted to continue hiding him, she would not have experienced what happened next. Her trusting obedience was rewarded with nothing short of a miracle. When the daughter of Pharaoh drew the little Hebrew baby from the basket floating on the Nile, the Lord moved her heart to compassion. Not only did the Egyptian princess proclaim she would adopt Moses as her son; she sent his very own sister—who happened to be nearby—to find a nursemaid for the baby. And of course, Moses’ sister pointed Pharaoh’s daughter to Moses’ own mother! God blessed Jochebed’s obedience by making her Moses’ nursemaid.

Making the Most of a Brief Opportunity

During the few years Jochebed was permitted to nurse her son, she would have had a profound influence upon him. Surely Jochebed would have told little Moses stories of the faithfulness of the God of Israel. Knowing their time together would not be long, Jochebed would likely have had a sense of urgency to teach Moses to love her God. We mothers would do well to remind ourselves that the time we have to influence our children is short, and we are to begin developing their love for God in their earliest years.

Never underestimate the amount of influence you can have on your son in his first years of life. In her book Six Ways to Keep the “Good” in Your Boy, Dannah Gresh states, “In 2005, the findings of a new study released in Pediatrics found that parent-infant connection—intentional togetherness—plays a key role in shaping the right side of an infant’s brain during the first year of life.” Noted neuroscientist Allan Schore says, “The brain of an infant…is not just shaped by genetics but also by experience in the last trimester of pregnancy through the child’s first year and a half of life…A parent or other caregiver can provide this early attachment, but large day-care situations may be less ideal.”

Do not be naive and assume that dropping your child off at an impersonal day-care facility every day won’t leave an imprint upon him. If you must work, it is essential that the person caring for your child loves your God and will emulate that love to your son. Though Jochebed had a very short time to influence Moses, the impression she made was strong enough that it stayed with him even when he grew older and lived in Pharaoh’s palace. Her teachings were likely the foundation God used to build Moses’ faith. And sure enough, when Moses grew older, he chose to suffer with his people rather than enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season in the palaces of Egypt (Hebrews 11:24-25).

The Bible does not say much about Jochebed and her character qualities. Her name, in Hebrew, means “Jehovah glorified.” Glorified, as used here, means “to make weighty, to make glorious.” Jochebed’s actions certainly lived up to her name. In her decision to trust Jehovah, His name was made glorious.

The Influence of a Few Years

The Lord did not bring our oldest boy, Tony, into our lives until he was 15 years old. For years our family has attempted to find a way to illustrate to people, in a clear way, how Tony became our son. About a year ago Tony, now in his thirties, called me, excited about a movie he had watched. He said, “I know I am not a big black football player like the guy in the movie, but what I saw reminds me so much of our family. And the mom in the movie reminds me of you!” I had seen the very popular movie only days before. I had cried while watching it because it brought back memories of when Tony first came to live with us. He lived in our home for only a short time, but just as the Lord had used Jochebed’s few years with Moses to shape him for life, God gave us a brief window of opportunity to give Tony a strong foundation for life.

Tony had already bonded with Steve even before he had moved in with us. Steve was his youth pastor, and right from the beginning they enjoyed a wonderful relationship. When Tony graduated from high school, he gave “Big Steve,” as he called him, a card saying thank-you for becoming his dad. It was a touching note that Steve still keeps with his most treasured possessions. We kind of look at that card as Tony’s “official adoption papers.”

During Tony’s short time with us, he and I had great talks about his new life as a believer, and about

girls. We talked about his dream to become a fighter pilot, about God’s character, and about girls. We discussed God’s plan for marriage…and did I mention we talked about girls? While Tony and I got along well, he related to me with love and respect, but never as his momma. I wanted to be a mom to him, but I respected that he had a mother whom he loved, and that he didn’t necessarily need another.

Upon graduating from high school, Tony was accepted to Texas A&M University. It was difficult for our family to say good-bye to him, but we were excited about the opportunities before him. I determined that my new role in his life would be as a prayer supporter.

Right away Tony, our overachiever, went out for the drill team, a much-sought-after and competitive position. The requirements were grueling. All the while, he was taking a full load of classes. By September, Tony had been selected for the team and he was thrilled—thrilled and exhausted.

One day Tony called home. In a weak and shaky voice, he said he had a severe case of pneumonia and would need to take a break from all activities. He told me he was not going to tell his drill commander he was sick for fear of losing his place on the drill team. Oh my sweet boy, who had worked so hard to achieve his goals! He had been such a man and accomplished great things. Now all I could hear was a little boy who needed a mother.

I asked the Lord for discernment. As I said earlier, we as mothers need to learn when God wants us to step back and allow our young men to battle their trials alone. But somehow I sensed this was different. Tony had worked so hard to land a spot on the team, and now he was terribly sick. I felt that the least I could do was ask Tony if I could make a phone call on his behalf. Reluctantly, he agreed.

I called a friend of Tony’s who was an alumnus of the school. He promised to make some calls. Soon I heard back from the drill team’s commandant, who called to assure me that Tony’s place on the team was secure. With that taken care of, we brought our very sick boy home and I took care of him until he got better. Through that experience, God knit our hearts together, and I became a momma to Tony.

Tony went on to graduate from college and became a fighter pilot. While he has achieved many amazing goals, I was never more proud of him than on the day he called to say, “You know, I am living my dream, and I now realize that it is not enough. My Sunday school teacher, a retired fighter pilot, told me that if I am doing all of this but I’m not surrendered to Christ, my life will be wasted.”

When asked how being a part of our family influenced him, Tony said, “The family was, and continues to be, my living definition of both what God expects from me, and what He wants for me. I am thankful for this example, and I have no doubt that it was God’s plan for our lives to connect.”

Only God Knows

Jochebed had no idea she was being used by the Lord to train a child who would one day become the deliverer of Israel. When David’s mother sent her young son to the battlefront, how could she have known God had been preparing him to slay a giant? And would she have ever dreamed that her gentle warrior would one day be the king of Israel, as well as a man after God’s own heart?

I say all that to bring up this very important point: The first teachers of these godly leaders were not theologians; they were mothers. And you are your son’s first teacher about God as well. You share the same role God entrusted to Moses’ and David’s mothers.

Generation after generation, the mission of motherhood has been the same. God invites mothers to join Him in molding the character of their sons. Will you partner with God in teaching your son how to love Him? The Word of God is your textbook. Will you determine to prepare yourself for this ministry? The Lord is searching for hearts that are loyal to Him. The same One who called the mothers of Jochebed and David is calling you. Only God knows the future that awaits your son. What an amazing honor He has given you. You are the vessel that the Lord will use to prepare your son for a lifetime of use by Him.

This Mom’s Review:


Do you have regrets regarding your children? I have regrets with my 16 year old son. I love him dearly, but I haven’t followed God’s lead in parenting him. Now I have a son to is disrespectful and lazy. Yes, he has good qualities. The problem is me. I failed to hold him accountable for his disobedience.


Reading this book, I’ve discovered how you and I can start today to raise our sons, whether half-grown (teenagers) or newbies (small children). I’m ready to give a few of the ideas a try:

  • Be willing to change yourself and set aside distractions. Change is hard. Setting aside distractions, even those seemingly good distractions, is hard to do. Sadly, I’ve allowed them to derail my attempts at godly parenting.

  • Envision your son’s future all the way into his manhood. This provides the motivational prompting that is needed in making the best decisions in raising him. Sometimes we forget just what we’re doing, allowing the daily to dos to get in the way of meaningful parenting.

  • Take advantage of teachable moments. Looking back, I’ve seen so many times I let go by without taking the time to talk with my child. Those moments could have been spent sharing with the child how he should have handled the situation and aligned the teaching with God’s instruction in the Bible.


    It’s not too late. Although your son may be as old as my 16 year old, I believe we still have time to do some good work in their raising. They are ours until they leave home, right?

  • Skinny Budget Diet by Linda Goff

    Skinny Budget Diet by Linda Goff

    How many diets does it take to get it right?

    I have tried to diet many times.  The only time I’ve lost a significant amount of weight was this past year while I was pregnant.  You heard me right.  It’s because I was eating healthy for the baby and pounds came off!  Now that my baby is here, I’ve started eating like a food junky again.  I want to lose the unhealthy weight, so I need a system that works.

    In addition to the healthy eating that I know works, I’ll be implementing the ideas in The Skinny Budget Diet by Linda Goff.  The book is a combination of personal testimony of the why and how it works, some commonly known but worthy ideas and new ideas – all put together to make a success out of dieting.

    Having financial problems?

    In addition to the diet, is help to get healthy on a budget.  Seems I have a problem with my weight and my finances lately.  What a relief to find a book that tackles both.  Now, I just need to get off my couch and follow the author in losing weight and spending wisely.

    The advice in the book comes across as a friend talking to you about her own testimony in a way that encourages you.  Enjoy!
    It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old…or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

    You never know when I might play a wild card on you!

    Today’s Wild Card author is:

    and the book:

    Siloam (January 8, 2013)
    ***Special thanks to Althea Thompson for sending me a review copy.***

    ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

     Linda Goff was obese for more than 20 years. She was told by a professor at one of the top journalism schools in the nation that her “look” wasn’t professional enough for television. When Linda left the university, she believed she had wasted four years of her life and thousands of dollars on an education that she could never use because of her size. God had other plans.

    After her 155-pound weight loss, Linda quietly began writing again. She was hooked. A blog grew into a talk show on the CTN network and a weekly newspaper column – reaching thousands of readers every week with her message of healthy weight loss. Now Linda speaks with groups around the country and runs a comfort food test kitchen with her family and friends as official “tasters.” To get her latest low-cal comfort recipes, visit www.theskinnybudgetdiet.com.

    SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:

    Get the strategy that was created in the kitchen of a 300-pound wife and mother who couldn’t afford another expensive weight loss plan. There was no more room in the family budget for ordering diet foods and supplements through the mail, no money to buy ongoing weekly support, and no way to pay for a high-priced weight loss surgery. Linda Goff had to find budget-friendly way to lose half of her body weight and keep it off for good. The Skinny Budget Diet was born.

    Read the secrets Linda shared with the Today Show, the Doctors, on the cover of Woman’s World Magazine, the Huffington Post, and Prevention Magazine. Inside this book, she will give you the step-by-step tools that allowed her to lose 155 pounds with sanity instead of starvation. You can eat normal meals with your family, drop the weight, and lower your monthly food budget.

    Product Details:
    List Price: $16.99
    Paperback: 256 pages
    Publisher: Siloam (January 8, 2013)
    Language: English
    ISBN-10: 1621360016
    ISBN-13: 978-1621360018

    AND NOW…THE FIRST CHAPTER:


    Wasting Time on a Growing Waist

    I WROTE THIS BOOK for you. And throughout these chapters you and I are going to get very close. There will be no such thing as TMI. I am happy to provide “too much information” on every page of this book if it will give you your life back. Want to hear about the roller coasters I couldn’t fit into or the lawn chairs I broke when I weighed three hundred pounds? You got it. I’ll even give you the blow-by-blow of how I shaved my legs every day without the ability to see my feet.

    It may not be pretty stuff, but I think it is important for you

    to understand that there is no such thing as “too broken” or “too

    far gone.” And while I’m not a fan of beating myself up over bad

    choices, you can learn from my twenty years of mistakes. I wasted thousands of dollars trying to buy my way out of obesity. It left me with a heavier body, heavier debt, and some heavy lies in my head: “I really shouldn’t eat the rest of these cookies. Oh, go ahead. You are so fat . . . what’s a few more pounds? But what if I can’t find clothes that fit anymore? This little plate of cookies won’t make any difference. You work hard. You deserve a treat.”

    I wish I could claim that underlying mental scars or repressed

    abuse led to my constant cycle of overeating and guilt. It didn’t. I

    could tell you that I was obese because of past pregnancies and

    post-baby weight. My youngest son weighed more than twelve

    pounds at birth. Twelve pounds! But that wasn’t the reason for my

    obesity.

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    I ate when I was happy—to celebrate friends and family, to

    reward myself after a stressful day of work, even to enjoy my

    favorite TV shows. I ate because food tasted good. When I left my

    mom’s healthy table and went to college, I gained my “freshman

    fifteen” and kept on going. I can’t blame my obesity on a thyroid

    problem or even a slow metabolism. I ate myself to morbid obesity through daily, unhealthy choices—each seeming so small and insignificant at the time.

    There are as many reasons for overeating as flavors at Baskin-

    Robbins. You may have a story that is similar to mine, or your

    story may be filled with true sadness. I understand that food can

    be an anesthesia to make the world seem less painful or a weapon

    to keep the world a safe distance away.

    It is not my intention to minimize the underlying causes of obesity. We’ll get into some of these reasons in more detail as we work through this book. At the moment simply understand that your reasons for overeating can no longer be used as excuses to stay obese. Excuses (even excuses that seem valid) won’t make you one pound lighter. They serve no purpose for good.

    Two Decades of Weight-Loss “Practice”

    “Honey, you have such a pretty face. Have you tried losing weight?” I’m generally not a violent person, but questions like that made me see red. If I could have lifted my foot above my waist, I would have kicked these well-meaning, skinny people in the gut . . . or the ribs . . . or whatever thin people have around their waists in the place of fat. Have I tried losing weight? You can’t be serious!

    I had more failed weight-loss plans in my past than candy wrappers on the bottom of my purse. Each one had a price tag. At the time did I understand the science of losing weight? You bet. I was an obese woman living in the United States. As a group we are probably more informed about calories and exercise than the general public. Ironic, isn’t it? I’ve spent hours watching people “sweat

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    to the oldies” and sculpt “buns of steel.” I have vivid memories of

    spreading cream cheese on a bagel while watching Tony Horton

    sell his latest exercise plan.

    I think the biggest myth going is that obese Americans don’t

    understand how they became overweight and have no idea how to

    lose it. Here is one lie that I always told myself: “I’m so confused.

    I don’t know whether to count calories, carbs, or fat.” That excuse

    was a great way to start a heated debate in any crowd and kill my

    dieting plans before lunch.

    The results of all these failed diet attempts were damaging—not

    only physically but also spiritually. I began to truly believe that:

    1. Losing weight the “old fashioned way” with diet and

    exercise is too hard and takes too long.

    2. People who lose weight and keep it off obviously

    have more willpower than I do. “Face it, Linda.

    There must be something wrong your character. You

    are just too weak to lose weight.”

    3. Maybe it is God’s plan for me to be this big. After all,

    He created each one of us to be unique and different.

    I’m supposed to be three hundred pounds.

    Most of us are obese because we eat more food than our bodies

    can burn, and we’ve been doing it for years. Mystery solved! What’s not as easy to understand is the role that the brain plays in this behavior. I’ve tried to honestly examine the choices I made at three hundred pounds, and the constant dialogue that ran through my brain. I think some of my daily thoughts about food may sound familiar to you. And so I present . . .

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    Looking at my “Day in the Life of” menu, I don’t know whether

    to laugh or cry. It is a true account of the crazy, internal battles of

    an obese woman. Being this honest may not be easy for you, but

    here is what I learned by writing down my daily menu:

    1. I had no idea at the time how many calories I was

    eating. If you quizzed me as I was brushing my teeth

    before bed, I would have guessed that I’d eaten about

    three thousand calories, not a button-popping fivethousand-

    plus in just one day. I’d skipped the Coke,

    potato chips, ranch dressing, and whipped cream.

    That’s healthy, right?

    2. Most of my food was coming from restaurants and

    not grocery stores. This is an important thing to

    realize . . . both in regard to maintaining a healthy

    weight and a healthy wallet. More on this later.

    3. I often ate while doing other things such as driving,

    working, and watching television.

    4. Frustration about dieting and weight loss was often

    my first thought of the day and the last thing in my

    head before falling asleep. So many precious hours

    that I gave away to my obesity.

    5. My size was changing my life: the clothes I wore, the

    people I ate with, and the intimacy I had with my

    husband.

    As I was starting diet number forty-seven (or maybe it was diet

    number forty-nine), I caught an interview with NBC weatherman

    Al Roker in which he talked about his gastric bypass surgery. It

    was a fascinating idea to me. You just make your stomach smaller

    and force yourself to eat less food. If you screw up, you throw up.

    Genius!

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    I was now a woman on a mission, searching the web and reading

    every magazine article I could find with details on the procedure.

    The before and after pictures for celebrities such as Carnie Wilson, Roseanne Barr, and Al Roker were amazing. They had lost hundreds of pounds in a short amount of time. Gastric bypass surgery was going to be my answer, my quick escape from morbid obesity.

    My Gastric Bypass Obsession

    I contacted a surgical weight-loss center in 2002 and began the

    long, pre-surgical process that included a consultation with a psychologist, an exam with my local doctor, and blood work. My primary physician went over the risks for gastric bypass surgery in great detail, and I’m sure that I smiled and nodded back when she told me that:

    1. The procedure has a death rate that some doctors

    estimate to be as high as one in one hundred. What

    went through my head: “Those are still pretty good

    odds, right?”

    2. The surgery can lead to vitamin and mineral deficiencies

    requiring daily supplements and B12 shots at

    least once a week. My thoughts: “Maybe Flintstone

    vitamins will come out with B12 in a gummy fruit.

    That would be cool.”

    3. There is a syndrome called dumping where your

    food can move too quickly through the small intestine

    causing nausea, diarrhea, and vomiting. Inside

    my head: “Did she just say something about a dump?

    What?”

    There was a big disconnect between the information given to

    me by my doctor and what I was focused on. When you believe

    that gastric bypass is your only ticket out of morbid obesity, the

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    risks don’t matter. I was willing to live with almost anything to be

    thin . . . especially if the solution didn’t require a lot of willpower

    on my part.

    From all of my research I knew that qualifying for gastric bypass

    surgery wasn’t going to be easy. I had to show my insurance company that I was unhealthy enough to need the procedure but healthy enough to live through the surgery. My weight wasn’t a problem. With a BMI (body mass index) between 47 and 48, I met that requirement. A healthy BMI range is between 18.5 and 24.9. I also had to show a history of failed dieting attempts. That was an easy requirement after two decades of being obese.

    I was happy (practically giddy) the day I mailed my huge stack

    of forms back to the surgical weight-loss center. Clearance from my doctor and psychologist? Check. Blood work proving that I didn’t have thyroid issues? Check. The name and policy number for my insurance company? Check. I was cleared to have the surgery and ready for takeoff.

    Unfortunately my insurance company didn’t agree. My calls to

    the surgical weight-loss center became more frequent as the weeks went by. A very patient lady in the admissions department gave me updates about her discussions with my insurance company. Even with gallbladder disease, occasional chest pains, and a scale at three hundred pounds, my insurance company said I didn’t have enough risk factors to justify the surgery. I wasn’t diabetic— yet. I didn’t have high blood pressure or breathing problems—yet. Basically I was too healthy.

    From Little Control to Out of Control

    The day I received the final no from my insurance company is

    one I will never forget. I was crushed. I believed my insurance

    company had just sentenced me to a lifetime of morbid obesity. I

    was so angry inside I gave up on the idea of ever trying to diet or

    exercise. If I needed to be “sick” to qualify for the surgery, fine.

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    Diabetes is common in my family, so I’ll just keep eating. Maybe

    my insurance company will pay for the procedure if I weigh three

    hundred fifty pounds. And I’m sure I will get the green light if I

    weigh four hundred pounds.

    Looking back, my daily plan to add another hundred pounds

    was nearly flawless. It could have been called a personal weight-

    gain plan. I ignored food labels, lived in the drive-through lane,

    and ate whatever was put in front of me. I even stopped going to

    the doctor so that I could skip that awkward “let’s get your weight” moment. I went three years without a yearly exam or checkup of any kind.

    There are very few “before” pictures of me during this time. I

    remember sitting in my car and going through stacks of developed

    pictures. Before letting anyone else see the pictures, I would

    throw away any photos showing my body (especially from the side). When my boys look back at their childhood photo albums, they are going to wonder if their mother ran off with the circus during this period of their lives. My kids loved disposable cameras and knew that they could take pictures of their dad, the dog, even our half-dead cat, but never, never take a picture of mom.

    I was hiding from my appearance, and I honestly have no idea

    how much I weighed at my heaviest. I do know that I didn’t fit in

    airplane seats, roller-coaster seats, theater seats, or even the seats

    at some of my favorite restaurants. How is that for irony? I was

    wearing a size 4X, and buying clothes was a horrendous experience.

    There are a few things in the world that I’ve always found impossible: folding a fitted sheet, safely clipping my cat’s claws, and finding size 26 clothes that made me “look skinny.” At three hundred pounds, shopping for jeans was an aerobic activity that often left me sweating. I’d walk into the dressing room, turn away from the mirror, and do the dance.

    Do you know the one? You start by jumping up and down to

    get the denim around your lumpy parts. Follow that up by lying

    flat on the ground to get the jeans buttoned. If you are successful

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    with the first two steps, it’s time for the final challenge. You must

    get back on your feet without popping a button or ripping out the

    seams in your seat.

    It was generally in these dignified moments that I asked myself,

    “When did I get this large? What am I going to do when even the

    plus size clothes are too small? How did I let myself get this out of control?”

    I enjoy living in a small town, but the closest mall is more than

    one hour away. I remember being so relieved when a local clothing store expanded their sizes beyond a 3X. It can be terrifying when

    your body is too large to wear anything in the store. Forget about

    dressing fashionably, I was just worried about dressing at all.

    When My Bottom Hit Bottom

    The stages of obesity are strangely similar to the stages of grief. If

    you’ve struggled with your weight for a long time, you may see

    yourself in one of the phases below. Because I’m such an overachiever, I had to hit all five stages before my bottom hit bottom. It was a twenty-year spiral down.

    1.  Denial:  “I’m not obese. I just have a lot of curves.

    This can’t be happening . . . not to me. Gaining a few

    extra pounds is simply a part of getting older, right?

    I don’t have the metabolism I had in high school, but

    it’s not like I have a serious problem.”

    2.  Anger:  “It’s not fair. If my spouse (children, friends,

    coworkers, and so on) didn’t sit around eating

    so many high-calorie foods, I wouldn’t have this

    problem. How could anyone lose weight with this

    many temptations? They are to blame.” Once we are

    in the second stage, we recognize that denial cannot

    continue.

    Goff-Skinny.indd 10

    3.  Bargaining:  “I know I have a problem. I’m going to

    lose the weight but not today. My schedule is just

    too hectic, and I’m too stressed out. I’ll start the diet

    on Monday.” In this stage we want more time before

    confronting the tough work we see ahead of us.

    4.  Depression:  “Why even bother to try anymore?

    What is the point of starting another diet? This isn’t

    going to work anyway. I might as well eat whatever

    I feel like. I’m always going to be fat.” This was

    the stage for me where I gave up on weight loss and

    exercise completely. I stopped going to the doctor

    so I didn’t have to get on the scale, and I started

    making fat jokes at my own expense to cover my

    pain.

    5.  Acceptance:  This is the hour, the minute, the second

    when you finally hit bottom. If you’ve ever fought an

    addiction and won, acceptance is a moment in time

    you will never forget. Mine was a Saturday morning

    in March 2007 at about 7:30 a.m. Oh yes, I can be

    that specific.

    I think the world has a misconception about acceptance. We

    imagine people standing up, dusting off their hands, and working

    to fix their problems. There is actually more to it than that.

    Acceptance is when you are willing to put your trust in something

    beyond yourself. It is an attitude that “I will do whatever it takes,

    no matter how hard, because I can’t live like this anymore. I will

    no longer value pride over health. I need help, and I’m not going to be afraid to ask for it.”

    For the first fifteen years of my obesity I bounced from anger

    (when a weight-loss plan didn’t work) back to bargaining (before I started the next diet). After being told no to gastric bypass surgery

    Goff-Skinny.indd 11

    by my insurance company, I finally slid into the depression stage. I gave up on weight loss and ate whatever was in front of me.

    When I travel and speak with groups, I get these questions more

    than any other: What happened in 2007? Why did you lose the

    weight? That question makes me sweat! For more than a year I

    gave the safe, comfortable answer that I wanted to be healthier

    and set a good example for my children. And while that is true, it

    wasn’t a part of my “bottom hitting bottom” moment.

    I’m going to be honest here because I believe it is important for

    other married people to understand that they aren’t alone. One

    weekend in March of 2007 it became clear to me that the awesome man I married couldn’t pretend to find me attractive anymore. Our intimacy was precious to me, and we were losing it. I was daring him to find me attractive at two hundred pounds, two hundred fifty pounds . . . OK, how about three hundred pounds? It was like my weight was a third person lying in our bed between us. I saw a day coming when we would live together “just as friends,” and it broke my heart.

    I have to stop for a moment and tell you a little bit about my

    husband. When we said our marriage vows in 1992, the man was

    serious. I never worried for one minute that he would cheat on me

    or want a divorce. Every day he told me he loved me. It was just a

    problem that there seemed to be a lot more of me to love every day.

    I don’t believe that wives should torture themselves trying to

    look like models. Let’s be honest. Even a supermodel doesn’t really look like a supermodel when you take away the hour of expert makeup and the magic of Photoshop. I do think we owe it to our spouses, however, to take care of ourselves. At three hundred pounds I stopped getting haircuts, considered makeup a waste of time, and avoided mirrors like the plague. Men are visual. God created them that way, and I can only imagine how tired my husband must have been seeing me in baggy sweatpants every day.

    I think my “bottom smacking” moment went back to those

    marriage vows we had said to each other fifteen years earlier. My

    Goff-Skinny.indd 12

    husband promised to love me in sickness and in health, but I was

    choosing sickness over health. It wasn’t fair to him. My out-of-control eating habits and lack of exercise were hurting my marriage and slowly killing me. I was ready to lose weight like a grown-up.

    Does this mean that I lost 155 pounds for my husband? No. I

    didn’t lose the weight for him. I lost the weight for us. I think if

    my only motivation had been to make my husband happy, my diet

    wouldn’t have lasted a week. This is at the core of why we can’t nag, badger, or beg our spouses to be healthier. A guilt trip or mean comments from my husband would have sent me to the nearest buffet line with a battle cry of, “You think I’m fat? I’ll show you fat!”

    Your parents may be worried sick about your growing size. Your

    spouse may be secretly throwing away your snacks. Your kids may dream of having a parent who is active and involved. That alone won’t be enough. A healthier you is a gift to those who love you, but it is a gift that must be given of your own free will. Has your bottom touched bottom?

    From Willpower to “Thy Will ” Power

    “I tell you the truth, if you have faith as small as a mustard seed,

    you can say to this mountain, ‘Move from here to there’ and it will move. Nothing will be impossible for you.”1

    I did a little bit of research about the mustard seed. It is generally

    about three millimeters in diameter and is one of the smallest

    seeds on the planet. What I found interesting is that the tiny mustard seed can grow to be one of the largest plants in the garden. But in March of 2007 all I knew about mustard was that it tasted great on a hot dog.

    Looking back, the mustard seed really was the perfect symbol

    for where I was at in my head. Because of so many past diet failures I had almost no faith that I would ever lose weight. I had

    almost no faith that God would listen to my prayers. I had almost

    no faith that He could give me the strength to try again . . . almost.

    Goff-Skinny.indd 13

    It turns out that the three millimeters of faith that I had in my

    heart was enough. Actually it was more than enough.

    To say that I probably didn’t look my best on that day in March

    of 2007 would be an understatement. I want you to give you clear

    picture of my “before” photo—no touch-ups. It was early on a

    Saturday morning, so you have to picture an obese woman with

    her hair standing straight up, not a lot of clothes on, and teeth that

    probably needed to be brushed. My eyes were practically swollen

    shut from my tears, and an occasional snot-bubble is not outside

    the realm of possibility. I looked rough. God didn’t care.

    He listened to me make an ugly, honest confession. I had allowed

    food to be my god. It had become my comforter and my crutch.

    And if you’ve struggled with your weight or with any addiction,

    you know that it can be an angry and unforgiving god. The very

    day I cried out and prayed for help, God (with the big, capital G)

    gave me a no-thank-you muscle I never had before.

    Here is the best way I can describe it. When an obese person

    sees something delicious on a plate, the “must have it” meter is off the charts. A piece of warm apple pie with vanilla ice cream would be an eighteen for me on a scale of one to ten. It was impossible to resist. On the Saturday I asked God to carry me, my “must have it” meter for the foods I loved was immediately dialed down. The food still looked delicious, but I didn’t feel as if I would die if I simply said, “No, thank you.”

    That feeling of strength has never left me. It gave my soul the

    courage to try again even after two decades of failure. It gave my

    brain the opportunity to put the science of weight loss into action.

    God took my faith (the size of a mustard seed) and moved a mountain; a 155-pound mountain of fat to be exact.

    If you can take away just one thing from my story, I hope it is

    this. God is still in the miracle business. I learned in a very real

    way that God has plans for us. Plans to prosper us and not to harm

    us. Plans to give us hope and a future.2 The Father who created you and can count every hair on your head is not a deadbeat dad.

    Goff-Skinny.indd 14

    We’re going to talk about the role that faith and support can

    play for you, but our first hour class is science. Don’t worry. You

    won’t need a periodic table of the elements or a Bunsen burner. In

    the next chapter I want to give you some basic facts about how

    our bodies work, use calories, and store fuel. There is a measurement tool called the body mass index and my own creation called a brain mass index. Both can be eye opening.

    House Call With Rita Hancock, MD

    House Call With Rita Hancock, MD

    Question:_ I have a long list of diets in my past. Many of them

    were all about restrictions and what foods I could and couldn’t

    eat. Do you ever wonder what God thinks about our constant

    dieting?

    Dr. Hancock: I think it breaks God’s heart to see us suffer

    with the consequences of obesity, but I also think it breaks

    His heart to see us chronically diet and fail. Our failures just

    compound the feelings of helplessness and hopelessness that

    lead to emotional eating. Plus, dieting fuels our obsession

    with food. It makes us want the food we think we shouldn’t

    eat even more. It’s a vicious, self-defeating cycle.

    Because each of us is so different (for example, for some of

    us restricting dieting backfires), I don’t believe God would advocate

    a single, one-size-fits-all diet for all Christians. No doubt

    God would give each of us an individualized diet if we lived

    in an ideal world where we could hear His instructions clearly.

    Unfortunately we don’t live in an ideal world. Being that

    we’re all unique, individual creations, and being that we’re all

    imperfect, God gave us only general guidelines to follow in

    Scripture. Let’s look at those general guidelines here:

    1. You shouldn’t be gluttonous (Prov. 23:2, 20–21).

    2. You shouldn’t worry about or think too much

    about what you will eat (Matt. 6:25).

    Goff-Skinny.indd 15

    3. You can eat any type of food (Mark 7:15–19).

    4. You should eat to the glory of God (1 Cor. 10:31).

    Let’s take a minute to talk about each of these scriptures

    specifically. First, think about the meaning of gluttony. Generally

    most would agree that it means, “overeating.” But how

    much is too much? Are you gluttonous if you eat twenty

    cookies? Most would say yes. How about if you eat two

    cookies? And can you be gluttonous in ways other than

    eating? The exact definition of gluttony can be hard to pin

    down, if you ask me.

    Second, do you worry too much about food and eating?

    A long time ago I was in bondage to food. I was either on a

    diet or off a diet, as if I was on a dieting roller coaster. My first

    thought in the morning was either, “Feed me!” or “I hope I

    don’t overeat today,” depending on which part of the roller

    coaster I was on.

    I most definitely thought about food more than I thought

    about God. In fact, my obsessive thoughts about food actually

    drove a wedge between God and me. That’s why I think it was

    bondage.

    Eventually, by the grace of God and using methods I discuss

    further in The Eden Diet, I was able to break free from this

    bondage and reestablish the right pecking order. Jesus was

    Lord over me, and I was lord over the food.

    Third, Scripture says you can eat any type of food. Notice

    that God didn’t say carrot sticks are morally superior

    to cheesecake. At the same rate Paul pointed out that just

    because something is allowable, it isn’t necessarily advisable.

    People with fat-clogged arteries ought to avoid eating more

    than a few bites of cheesecake, lest they have heart attacks and

    die. The point is, you must use common sense and eat potentially

    unhealthy food in small amounts, especially if you’re

    trying to lose weight or if you have unique medical needs that

    require you to follow a strict diet.

    Goff-Skinny.indd 16

    Fourth, you should eat with an attitude of thankfulness

    and reverence to God. Eating with the proper attitude, that is,

    without anxiety and guilt, leads to greater satisfaction with the

    eating experience so that less food equals more joy.

    Rita Hancock, MD, is a Christian physician with Ivy League nutrition training and studies of obese psychology. She draws upon her faith and her personal success overcoming

    childhood-onset obesity to help those in bondage to food, eating, and dieting. To learn more about

    Dr. Hancock’s work or purchase The Eden Diet or other resources developed by Dr. Hancock, visit her

    website at www.theedendiet.com.

    Goff-Skinny.indd 17

    Manners That Matter for Moms: The Essential Book of Life Skills for Your Kids

    Having teenagers, I have missed the mark when it comes to teaching manners.  I find myself getting aggravated because they don’t act a certain way.  Yet, I never taught them to be mannerly and respectful to others.   The suggestions in Manners That Matter for Moms: The Essential Book of Life Skills for Your Kids range from greetings to dining manners.  I even found that I need some work in a few of the areas, like in who to introduce first in an introduction.

    There is even a short quiz at the beginning of each chapter to test your knowledge of what you’re about to read.   This makes it fun for both you and your kiddos as you begin training (or retraining) them on good manners.

    Bible translations used in this book include MSG, NIV, and AMP.

    Now onto the book tour…

    It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old…or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

    You never know when I might play a wild card on you!

    Today’s Wild Card author is:

    and the book:

    Harvest House Publishers (October 1, 2012)
    ***Special thanks to Ginger Chen for sending me a review copy.***

    ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

    Maralee McKee is a sought-after expert in social interactions at work, at home, and in the community. She has taught thousands of children in her Manners Mentor classes, and her corporate clients include Hyatt, Chick-fil-A, State Farm, Campus Crusade, and AT&T. Maralee and her husband live in Florida with their two sons.

    Visit the author’s website.



    SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:

     
    Corporate trainer and mentor Maralee McKee turns her attention to the home and shares the simple, savvy, and sincere skills kids need in order to flourish in today’s culture. Tools for each stage of life make this the go-to book for moms with children of any age.

    Product Details:
    List Price: $12.99
    Paperback: 224 pages
    Publisher: Harvest House Publishers (October 1, 2012)
    Language: English
    ISBN-10: 0736944893
    ISBN-13: 978-0736944892

    AND NOW…THE FIRST CHAPTER:


    Moms Like You and Me

    Today our children are our shadow.

    Tomorrow they will be our reflection.

    Maralee McKee

    I was nervous. I wanted this evening to be perfect for my husband, who was hosting a client-appreciation dinner for his company. He had worked hard planning every detail—especially choosing the guest speaker. After some negotiating, the man he hoped would accept his invitation agreed to present the keynote address.

    This gentleman is a financial genius. He holds three degrees—one each from Harvard, Yale, and Oxford. He consults privately with kings and presidents about global economic issues. All of this at the ripe old age of 34. He and I are about the same age, but I feared that was all we were going to have in common. A genius I’m not.

    Common Ground
    My husband planned to go from table to table, chatting with guests through dinner. That meant our special guest and I would share a cozy table for two throughout the 90-minute dinner before he took the stage. Driving to dinner, I was still trying to think of conversation topics he might enjoy and I would have an inkling about.

    My list was short.

    My concerns about us not having much common ground to talk were quickly realized—he was intense.

    Moments after sitting down, he asked, “Maralee, I like to know my audience a little before I speak. What would you say are some of the economic and libertarian concessions you believe your guests are willing to make in light of our current financial and political surrounding?”

    Okeydokey! Believe it or not, that particular question had not made my short list of conversation topics. Hiding my panic, I quickly decided that in order to survive this meal, I was going to have to be the one asking the questions.

    I answered brightly, “I’m sure my husband will have more accurate insight than I do. I’ll call him over in a minute.” Then I asked our guest where he was from. He shared that he was born in Chicago and still lived there. I had recently visited for the first time and been smitten with the city. We began to find common ground talking about Chicago’s famed Miracle Mile. A few minutes later I asked about his family. He beamed as he told me that he and his wife were expecting their first child the next month—a girl.

    We talked about how children change everything. But then he added, “But only for a little while.”

    His genius was obvious in what he said next. It has been one of the most impacting maxims on the way I parent.

    Twenty-One Percent of My Life
    He explained, “We spend a statistically small percentage of our lives in direct contact with our children. Let’s say I live to be eighty-five, and my daughter lives with my wife and me until she leaves for college at eighteen. In that case, we’re only under the same roof for twenty-one percent of my life. Seventy-nine percent of it will be without daily contact.”

    My mind raced to make sense of it all. How can that be? Only 21 percent of my life will be spent sleeping under the same roof as each of my children?

    The cold reality of the number made my heart shiver—it still does.

    Twenty-one percent is all the time we have with our children, and that’s if you start counting when they are newborns. If they’re five or fifteen already, a measure of that time is gone.

    Is it enough time to teach them everything they need to know to thrive on their own when they’re grown? Yes it is, but they won’t learn it by accident. If we want our children to grow into adults who interact with kindness, respect, self-control, graciousness, and friendliness, we must teach them a lost art in today’s culture. It’s the art of being intentionally kind and patient in the words they say and the things they do every day, everywhere, with everybody. Quite simply, we much teach manners.

    Moms like You and Me
    Because you’re reading this page, I know you and I have some things in common. Moms like us deeply love our children and want to give them every skill they need to soar through life. We have high hopes for them—and not merely that they attend Ivy League schools, gain impressive-sounding job titles, win beauty pageants, or accumulate worldly wealth and fame.

    Those are all fine things. But what matters more to you and me is that our children grow up to be kind, compassionate, friendly, warmhearted, caring, self-disciplined, self-controlled, self-reliant, fair, generous, empathetic, and even-tempered adults.

    We wish them joy, so we want them to laugh daily and easily.

    We want them to go with the flow but not to be easily swayed.

    We want them to be optimistic but not to wear rose-colored glasses.

    We want them to understand that personal conflict is inevitable but making enemies is optional.

    We pray that they realize that apologizing for mistakes doesn’t mean you’re messed up. It means you have the strength of character to do the hard work of untangling messes.

    We want our children to have a strong sense of right and wrong and the moral strength to live up to their convictions.

    We want them to have goals and ambitions but not to let their goals become their gods.

    We pray that they will always be secure in who they are so they don’t become bullies or easy targets for bullies.

    We want them to please people but not to be people pleasers.

    And because mamas enjoy hearing good things about their children, if we notice ours displaying these traits, we won’t mind a bit if people compliment them and tell us that our children are sweet and engaging and impressive. Christ within them makes all these things possible. Etiquette is the vehicle they’ll use to express their character in word and deed.

    Etiquette Is Kindness and Love in Action
    The apostle Paul’s famous passage about love in 1 Corinthians 13:4-5 lists nine attributes of love, and seven of them describe what love is not. That leaves only two positive descriptions of love: patience and kindness.

    Etiquette is the language that expresses patience and kindness in our interactions with one another. It teaches us to make modest sacrifices of our time, our agenda, and our momentary wants so we can live out patience and kindness. Etiquette is not pretense or fussiness. It’s not an attempt make children perfect. Manners are the language of love, and we teach them to our children for their benefit and for God’s glory.

    Scripture often calls us to kindness. As Paul says in Ephesians 4:32 (niv), “Be kind and compassionate to one another.” Etiquette shows you how to live this way.

    Etiquette Doesn’t Replace Authenticity
    I sincerely do not want to add stress to any mother’s or child’s life. When etiquette is forced or stressed, it’s only on the outside. Love, on the other hand, is not forced.

    We don’t teach etiquette in order to mold children into something they are not. Some children are spontaneous, spirited, and quick to share their opinion. That’s fantastic! They will grow up to be quick-witted, fun, welcoming leaders. Some children are reserved, slow to join in, and quiet. That’s fantastic too! They will grow up to be thoughtful and always there for you—servant leaders of their generation. God gave our children their personalities. Etiquette gives them the skills to bring the best of their personalities to the forefront.

    Etiquette Has Evolved
    Gone are the days when manners were about debutante balls, seated dinners for 12 with the butler serving, hats and gloves, and making sure the children were seen but not heard.

    The etiquette I share with you has evolved. It’s in tune with the realities and sensibilities of our modern, casual, techno-savvy, fast-paced culture. Grandma’s etiquette was perfect for her day. But if we use her etiquette exclusively, we’re going to appear stiff and stuffy and out of sync for the time and place Christ has placed us in.

    I’ve kept grandma’s timeless principles of courtesy, respect, hospitality, and consideration and used those principles to chart the course of our contemporary everyday encounters.

    Etiquette Isn’t Artificial
    Some people say we shouldn’t teach etiquette lest we train people to be artificial. Not so. Rather than forcing people to be artificial, etiquette frees them to become the best version of themselves.

    On the other hand, some people try to use etiquette to mold their children into perfect people. Perfection is Satan’s trap. God didn’t give us our children for our own glory but so that we could empower them to freely and gladly live for Christ and reflect His glory. Etiquette polishes us so that Christ’s reflection can be seen more easily in us.

    The skills you’ll learn about in these pages aren’t to be lived out legalistically. They are written in sand, not stone. You can use these principles to build and honor relationships inside and outside your family. This is an important concept. After all, the reason we were put here in the first place was to be in relationship with God and other people.

    Etiquette Isn’t Window Dressing
    Motherhood gives us an opportunity to be the people we want our children to become. That’s why I wrote this book—to help you teach your children and be a role model for them so their good manners spring from their hearts and are not just for show.

    For manners to be more than window dressing in our lives, they must be expressed in the words we say and the things we do—and not just when we find it convenient or are in an especially good mood. Our good manners become true when they are ingrained into us, just as we can learn a new language and use it until it is as natural as our native tongue.

    In the pages of this book you’ll find the modern, essential skills you need to know and model to help your children soar through life free from social uneasiness so they can become well liked, well mannered, and well respected. None of it is hard to learn. All of it pays a lifetime of dividends.

    Our Journey Together
    I’m so glad we’re going on this journey together! I’ve prayed and worked hard on this book for the benefit of you and your family. My prayer has been that it will encourage, inspire, and mentor you.

    People often ask me how I became the Manners Mentor. It’s a pretty amazing story. I can still barely believe I am where I am today.

    When I was nine years old, I was in a situation no little girl should experience. At that time, I started praying for three specific things. Over the next 20 years, God answered my three prayers, slowly unfurling His plans and purposes for me in ways that even the most imaginative novelist could never conceive. I’ll briefly share my story with you (friends should know about friends!) so you’ll understand my passion for these skills and why I’m honored to bring you the message God has entrusted to me—that manners matter to Him.

    In the teaching part of the book, I’ll start by showing you how to teach etiquette without stressing or ever having to nag. We moms already have a lot on our plates. We don’t need to pile more “must do’s” on them. My way of teaching is gentle, subtle, and lifestyle-oriented. You won’t find your children pushing back. But you will see children who are more patient, kinder, and more likely to consider how their words and feelings impact the people around them.

    You’ll also find relevant, modern, indispensable tips on everything from table manners to texting. You’ll learn how to make positive first impressions, interact with ease, and give and receive gifts graciously. You’ll also learn about using Wonder Words, beginning and ending conversations on a high note, dining skills, table manners, and so much more. All of it is in sync with today’s sensibilities and from the heart.

    Chapters 4 through 17 start with just-for-fun etiquette IQ tests. “Mom to Mom” tips start in chapter 5. These are special things that are on my heart to share with you. They’re adult-level skills that will help you shine or special tips for teaching a particular skill set and touching the heart of your child.

    Chapters 4 through 17 also include has multiple sections titled “Growing in Graciousness (Next-Level Skills).” These next-level skills allow you to pick and choose what you want to add into the mix. You can introduce a particular skill whenever your children will benefit the most given their age and stage, natural bent (introvert or extrovert), personality, level of maturity, confidence, and degree of manual dexterity.

    You might look at all these skills and say, “Wow, Maralee! That looks like a whole bunch. How can I teach all of that?” Let me assure you, you can! It’s my joy to show you how. The skills you’ll find here are the ones I’ve taught successfully in hundreds of my Manners Mentor classes. And of course, I use them at home with my own two sons, Marc and Corbett. These skills are classroom tested, and they work in the real world.

    Just don’t rush the process. You will teach and model for months or even years before some skills become parts of your child’s life. That’s normal. We’re in it for the long haul, aren’t we?

    Our Shadow and Reflection
    I often think of the evening several years ago when I dined with the financial genius. Now that my two sons are nine and fifteen, his words resonate deeper than they did when he first showed me that children change everything “but only for a little while.” We have 21 percent of our lives or less to daily impact theirs—just 21 percent to pass along to them everything they need to know to soar through life on their own.

    The number one predictor of our children’s future success and happiness is their ability to get along well with others, to be well-liked, and to be confident and at ease in their interactions. You’re holding in your hands the how-to’s of instilling these character traits in your children.

    Today our children are our shadow. Tomorrow they’ll be our reflection. Let’s embark on this journey together.

    Letting Go of Supermom

    Being a mom isn’t an easy job.  I find myself worrying how I will manage my teenagers and a new baby when he arrives.  Comparing myself to the Proverbs 31 woman, I definitely don’t measure up.

    I haven’t been the perfect mom to my two oldest.   I find that I’ve slacked off greatly in the departments of spiritual training and teaching responsibility.  However, I couldn’t be perfect even if I continued trying.

    Reading Letting God of Supermom, the author impresses upon us that the passage isn’t about just “one woman but every woman” meaning that the passages include a little bit for each woman depending on their role in life as either a stay at home mom, a work at home mom or work outside the home mom.  So, maybe that means we don’t have to do it all…

    A mom isn’t just a mom.  She may also be a child of God, a wife, an employee, and so on.  The book is divided up into sections of tips and advice for these various roles:

    • Faith
    • Family
    • Home
    • Health and Beauty
    • Balance
    • Working

    While some of the information provided isn’t new to me, it worked well with the new information to encourage me as a mom to do the things I know I should be doing — prioritize — and not be so hard on myself for what I choose to let go.

    As a working mom, I look forward to referencing this book to make my life more manageable and get my parenting priorities of spiritual training and teaching responsibility met on a regular basis.

    I can do this … and so can you!

    About the Book

    It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old…or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

    You never know when I might play a wild card on you!

    Today’s Wild Card author is:

    and the book:

    Publisher: Siloam (August 7, 2012)
    ***Special thanks to Althea Thompson for sending me a review copy.***

    ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

    Dr. Daisy Sutherland is the founder and CEO of Dr. Mommy, LLC. She is a doctor of chiropractic by profession, wife, and mom to five children, whom she has homeschooled for the past twelve years. She hosts a weekly Blog Talk Radio show called Family Talk and is the featured parenting expert on Mom Talk Radio, a nationally syndicated radio show that airs on more than fifty stations, reaches 50,000 moms, and has been recognized in The Oprah Magazine, Women’s Day, USA Today, and Parenting. Women all over the country have benefitted from “Dr. Mommy’s” health, parenting, and career management tips and godly advice. She is the voice and advocate for every mom and says she is blessed to be able to help so many.

    Visit the author’s website.

    SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:

    This guide will include time-management and organization tips, how-tos for handling stress, nutrition and general wellness advice, parenting and relationship tools, and ways to stay spiritually refreshed and highly productive without losing it! Dr. Mommy will also share her best tips and tricks from her personal experience of being a homeschooling, CEO mom.

    [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L1mPey3aKog]

    Product Details:
    List Price: $15.99
    Paperback: 256 pages
    Publisher: Siloam (August 7, 2012)
    Language: English
    ISBN-10: 1616384638
    ISBN-13: 978-1616384630

    AND NOW…A SAMPLE (Click on pages to see them better):

    365 Things Every New Mom Should Know

    As I read through 365 Things Every Mom Should Know, I was taken back to when my other children were babies.   The memories are delightful.   However, there are so many things in this book that I didn’t do that encourage mom in loving and nurturing her child during the first year of life.

    I am expecting a baby in late November.  I look forward to opening this book each day of Abel’s first year of life.  Inside the pages of this book, a new mom will find:

    • Encouragement and what to expect
    • Caring for your baby
    • Interacting with baby – more than changing diapers and rocking him to sleep
    • Weekly and monthly markers of how old your baby is
    • Reminders for baby’s checkups
    • Taking care of you, including your body
    • Loving your husband, managing your home and having realistic expectations
    • Walking through the many stages of development in a baby’s first year of life
    • Breastfeeding and managing postpartum blues
    • Most importantly involving God in it all. – spiritual prompts and praying for your child

    Enjoy the book and the baby you’ve been blessed with!

    About the Book

     
     
    It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books.  A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured.  The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old…or for somewhere in between!  Enjoy your free peek into the book!

    You never know when I might play a wild card on you!

    Today’s Wild Card author is:

    and the book:

    Harvest House Publishers (April 2012)
    ***Special thanks to Ginger Chen of Harvest House for sending me a review copy.***

    ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

    Linda Danis has a degree in marketing and spent five years in hotel 
    management before staying at home to run a hotel of a different 
    sort—guests ages 3, 6, 9, and 11. Linda has written Sunday school 
    curricula, started a co–op preschool, and leads a Moms in Touch prayer 
    ministry at her children’s school.  She lives with her husband, Dave, 
    and children in California.

    SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:
    This daily guide to the first year of a baby s life combines prayerful, playful, and practical information to energize new moms. Features weekly devotionals and daily activities that foster a baby s physical, emotional, social, and spiritual growth.

    Product Details:
    List Price: $12.99
    Paperback: 272 pages
    Publisher: Harvest House Publishers
    Language: English
    ISBN-10:0736923829
    ISBN-13: 978-0-7369-2382-8

    AND NOW…THE FIRST CHAPTER:

    My child, you
    hold the whole of my heart in your small hands.
    Author Unknown
    Week 1
    Day 1
    After all these long months, your precious little baby has finally
    arrived. The child you have longed for is here to hold, to look at, and to
    touch. Your baby will look up at you and recognize your familiar voices. You
    are the ones he has been longing to meet—his mommy and daddy! Get to know your
    sweet little baby—hold him, rock him, smell his skin, gaze at him, marvel at
    his tiny fists, caress him. Treasure this awesome miracle!
    Day 2
    On the day you bring your baby home for the first time, have
    everyone in your family place their hands on her and pray for her. This will be
    a precious moment for your family to share together as you welcome her into
    your family and give thanks to God for this wonderful gift!
    Day 3
    If you have older children who want to hold their new sibling, use
    a nursing “donut pillow” to help them support your baby’s head. Have your child
    sit all the way back on the couch. Place the semicircle nursing pillow around
    his waist. Set your baby on the pillow with his bottom wedged in between your
    older child’s tummy and the pillow. Rest your baby’s head on your older child’s
    arm that is resting on the pillow. Even if your child lets go of the baby, his
    head will still be secure on the pillow. Of course, you should always be
    sitting right next to your new baby, monitoring his safety. This also works for
    young visitors, but I would suggest waiting a week or two before letting a
    nonfamily-member child hold your baby.
    Day 4
    Despite what all the books may say, most
    women experience some soreness (or a lot of soreness!) in the first weeks of
    nursing. Try using your Lamaze breathing when your baby latches onto your
    breast. If your nipples are cracked or blistered, blot them dry with a cotton
    diaper after you have finished nursing. Saliva has enzymes that can irritate
    sore nipples. After you have dried the saliva off, express a little milk and
    rub it on your nipples. Let them air dry. Also, do not look down at your baby
    the entire time you nurse. This position can strain your neck and cause tension
    headaches. If you can persevere through the first two weeks of nursing, things
    will get better.
    Day 5
    Sometimes as a new parent it’s hard to tell whether or not you
    should call your pediatrician. If you are reluctant to call your doctor in the
    middle of the night, you can usually call the nursery at the hospital where you
    gave birth. The nurses are awake and can advise you as to whether you should
    call your doctor right away or if it can wait until the morning. Do not
    wait if your baby has a fever higher than 99.9 degrees rectally (this is the
    most accurate way to take your baby’s temperature). Call your doctor
    immediately.
    Day 6
    Drink water every time you nurse to stay hydrated and to maintain
    your milk supply. Always keep a water bottle close at hand. It is a good idea
    to set up a “nursing station” wherever you will be nursing the most. Have
    everything you need right at hand—a water bottle, a burp cloth, a nursing
    pillow, a book or magazine to read, and nursing pads.
    Day 7
    When your baby startles while lying on her back (the Moro reflex),
    gently but firmly hold her hands together close to her chest to calm her and
    make her feel more secure. Say, “It’s okay, sweetheart. Mommy will help you.”
    This reflex will disappear by four months.
    Reflections on the Week
    I prayed for this child, and the Lord has granted me what I asked of him.
    1
    Samuel 1:27
    Before I formed you in the womb I knew
    you, before you were born I set you apart.
    Jeremiah
    1:5
    An Incredible
    Love
    You have had your baby only one short week and yet you can hardly
    remember what life was like without him. You prepared for months for his
    arrival—read books, set up the nursery, went to prenatal classes—yet nothing
    could prepare you for the overwhelming love you feel for this child. There are
    no words quite powerful enough to describe the emotions you feel.
    Then the impossible happened; each day you grew to love him more.
    The sheer magnitude of love takes your breath away. Can there be anything more
    wonderful than when he gazes into your eyes, when you feel his small body
    curled up in your arms, when you feel his warm breath on your cheek, when his
    little fingers wrap tightly around yours? Your heart is ready to burst with
    this new miracle in your life.
    It doesn’t matter if this is your first or fifth child, the
    profound love you feel for your new baby never changes. I remember during my
    second pregnancy, I secretly worried that I might not love this new baby as
    much as my first. How could I ever love another child as much as I loved her?
    But the moment I held my new baby, I knew immediately I had worried for
    nothing. There was no difference in my love. It was as amazingly wonderful and
    intense as the love I had for my first. It happened again when my third and
    fourth children were born. We don’t have to divide our love between our
    children. Our love actually multiplies, giving us even more love to share. It
    is one of the ways God’s love works in motherhood. We just have more and more
    love to give away!
    Dear God, thank You for this precious little baby. He is
    everything I prayed for. Everything about him is perfect. Words can hardly
    describe how much I love him. Because of him, I have a better idea now of how
    much You, my heavenly Father, love me. Please help me adjust to all the changes
    I will face as a new mother. Amen.