John’s words of thanks for our beautiful, healthy son (and
tax deduction) were his own, but they were also an echo from my heart. The echo
was equally thankful for a beautiful, healthy baby (and the fact that being ten
days late didn’t make my labor very long or hard). J
While the focus of December 31st in our family is
on the fact that it is Zach’s birthday, for most people, the day is
traditionally a time of making promises and resolutions to do all sorts of
things—or to stop doing all sorts of things. This is not necessarily a bad
thing. In fact, I’m asking…even pleading with you to make the same New Year’s
resolution I made for the first time that New Year’s Eve morning in 1982.
The resolution I’m asking you to make? To be thankful every
single day for the privilege and blessing of being a parent. You heard me. We
should be thankful every single day we can be called Mom or Dad.
Being a parent isn’t easy and it’s not always pleasant, but
it is always a privilege to be
thankful for.
That being said, I’m thankful Zach was such a happy,
pleasant baby. I’m thankful Zach was a little boy who refused to entertain the
thought of training wheels (at age 3), a little boy who lovingly cared for his
little sisters, who worked side by side with his daddy from the time he could
carry a hammer and I’m thankful for the times I was the one he looked for when
he crossed the finish line in a track meet or cross-country race. I’m thankful
for the dogwood blooms and for the help in the barn when we couldn’t save a ewe
in distress of lambing. I’m thankful for the daughter in-law and two precious
little girls he has given us.
And yes, I am even thankful for the difficult times—the times
most parents experience to some degree or another. I’m thankful for these times
because in working through them, we learn what we are made of and what it
really means to be thankful for the bond of family now and forever no matter
what. So as you make your resolutions (or not) for this year, live each and every day of 2015 with an attitude of thankfulness that you are a parent.
Momma D