True Riches

LORD, teach me to pray. Help me to pray about not just my needs, but also the needs of others. Show me how to pray about everything. Help me to leave the things I pray about at Your feet and in Your hands. Teach me to trust You so much that I don't have preconceived ideas about the way my prayers must be answered. I know it is my job to pray and Your job to answer. Help me to do my job and let You do Yours. Help me trust You will answer in Your way and in Your time.


For this reason, since the day we heard about you, we have not stopped praying for you. We continually ask God to fill you with the knowledge of his will through all the wisdom and understanding that the Spirit gives, (Colossians 1:9)

LORD, I pray for the people You have put in my life and on my heart. Fill them with wisdom and understanding and the knowledge of Your will so that they will learn to hear Your voice and come to know You better, so that they can have a closer walk with You. I pray that for myself as well. Thank you for Your love.



Fruit Of The Spirit, A Must-Have



Galatians 5:22-23
But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, forbearance, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. Against such things there is no law.

There are times when we raise our voice to our parents. The video is simply telling that we should always watch out our actions towards our parents. They were made by GOD for a purpose in our lives. They were not created as our earthly loving parents if GOD won't allow them to share their wholeness upon us. When we were born, parents did everything to give us what we needed. They mastered the language of love, they also mastered the art of sacrifice, they even mastered how to control their tears despite how heavily it downpour. Parents are the ultimate source of strength which also comes from the LORD. They can see things, they can feel emotions, and they can sense our thoughts even if we are tongue-tied to speak.

Being a parent, myself, is really challenging. I always have to make sure that if I get angry, I should explain to her the reason of my actions. Also, if I raise my voice towards my sister, I should explain to her why I got mad or if her aunt did something not right. Every detail of my actions must be explained to her because a child mimics the parent’s actions. They tend to do what we do and sometimes what we say. It's very important that we learn to live wisely and spiritually equip in front of our children to match how we want them to become as adults. If our doings and our sayings are the same and good, then it won't matter which one they mimic. If she grows doing it without knowing the impact; she will only acquire a bad trait.

She’s eight right now and I seldom hear her raising voices towards me and I hardly ever feel she’s angry at me. She does not even say if she’s complaining about me being away for too long from her. She understands if she can’t buy what she wanted and she recognizes if we cannot afford to have something at the moment she feels like having for example a book or some toys. She does not ask for many material things aside from Bible book and any educational English books.

I know that I am not a perfect parent to her because I chose to be far away for a better living than to be with her. However, I made sure that I constantly communicate with them to let her know I am away for a purpose. I know that this lovely kid is loved by GOD so dearly. She even had dreams where she visits Heaven’s gate and was able to talk to the LORD JESUS CHRIST. She got a message of love from the LORD and she always does. She recently got a message and it as an alarming one and we have to pray constantly for this dream.

I am happy for my child because she is growing deeply in-love with GOD. I always pray that she won’t change and I always tell her that no matter what happens, she should keep her deep faith in CHRIST JESUS. She should not let the devil devour her heart and replace it with impurities. I am asking GOD for more guidance in raising my child so that she will only absorb good stuff. I pray that she will be a prayerful kid, who is persistently bringing everything to Jesus. I should bring her to the church so she can participate in Sunday school activities with other Christian kids. Like me, I should let her grow her faith through her church teachers and GOD-fearing peers. There is so much happiness as a parent if your kid grows so well under the loving care of everyone around her.

Dear Father,

Help us as parents become an excellent example in front of our children, so they don't repeat our failures, but become better adults. Give your guidance upon us so we can become a good role model to them by showing the greatest love they should have.


In Jesus' Name.
Amen.

The Role of Parents/Parent

Train up a child in the way he should go, And when he is old he will not depart from it.- Proverbs 22:6 (KJV) 

Becoming a parent is a life-changing event – and life as a parent keeps changing too. There's a lot you can do to stay positive through the ups and downs of parenting today.

One of the best ways to keep a positive perspective on parenting is to remind yourself of what your children bring to your life:
  • unconditional love and admiration just for being you 
  • hero worship – your children are probably the only people who think you’re the strongest, wisest and bravest person in the world 
  • the chance to be a child again through sharing in the magic and wonder of your children’s play and learning 
  • the chance to experience an amazing range and intensity of emotions, strengths and skills 
  • the chance to reflect on your own values, attitudes and assumptions about the world 
  • the chance to take time out from being a grown-up. 

I must know how a parent should build his/her relationship with the children so that they will grow as an equipped human-being of their level. Absolutely not all kids are the same. A parent should ensure that their children's independent intellectual thoughts are not going to get affected by the world outside but it will start inside their home. 

Here is an article I researched that could add up to her school essay about her parent's role.

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Although a parent’s role in their children’s learning evolves as kids grow, one thing remains constant: we are our children’s learning models. Our attitudes about education can inspire theirs and show them how to take charge of their own educational journey.

Be a role model for learning. In the early years, parents are their children’s first teachers — exploring nature, reading together, cooking together, and counting together. When a young child begins formal school, the parent’s job is to show him how school can extend the learning you began together at home, and how exciting and meaningful this learning can be. As preschoolers grow into school age kids, parents become their children’s learning coaches. Through guidance and reminders, parents help their kids organize their time and support their desires to learn new things in and out of school.

Pay attention to what your child loves. “One of the most important things a parent can do is notice her child. Is he a talker or is he shy? Find out what interests him and help him explore it. Let your child show you the way he likes to learn,” recommends Dalton Miller-Jones, Ph.D.

Tune into how your child learns. Many children use a combination of modalities to study and learn. Some learn visually through making and seeing pictures, others through tactile experiences, like building block towers and working with clay. Still others are auditory learners who pay most attention to what they hear. And they may not learn the same way their siblings (or you) do. By paying attention to how your child learns, you may be able to pique his interest and explain tough topics by drawing pictures together, creating charts, building models, singing songs and even making up rhymes.

Practice what your child learns at school. Many teachers encourage parents to go over what their young children are learning in a non-pressured way and to practice what they may need extra help with. This doesn’t mean drilling them for success, but it may mean going over basic counting skills, multiplication tables or letter recognition, depending on the needs and learning level of your child. “There may be times to review, but don’t take on the role of drill master,” adds Diane Levin, Ph.D. ” And when you do review it should feel as if your child wants to be a part of the practice.”

Set aside time to read together. Read aloud regularly, even to older kids. If your child is a reluctant reader, reading aloud will expose her to the structure and vocabulary of good literature and get her interested in reading more. “Reading the first two chapters of a book together can help, because these are often the toughest in terms of plot,” notes Susan Becker, M. Ed. “Also try alternating: you read one chapter aloud, she reads another to herself. And let kids pick the books they like. Book series are great for reluctant readers. It’s OK to read easy, interesting books instead of harder novels.”

Connect what your child learns to everyday life. Make learning part of your child’s everyday experience, especially when it comes out of your child’s natural questions. When you cook together, do measuring math. When you drive in the car, count license plates and talk about the states. When you turn on the blender, explore how it works together. When your child studies the weather, talk about why it was so hot at the beach. Have give-and-take conversations, listening to your child’s ideas instead of pouring information into their heads.

Connect what your child learns to the world. Find age-appropriate ways to help your older child connect his school learning to world events. Start by asking questions. For example, ask a second-grader if she knows about a recent event, and what’s she heard. Then ask what she could do to help (such as sending supplies to hurricane victims). You might ask a younger child if he’s heard about anything the news, and find out what he knows. This will help your child become a caring learner.

Help your child take charge of his learning. “We want to keep children in charge of their learning and become responsible for it,” says Dalton Miller-Jones, Ph.D. “We want them to be responsible for their successes and failures, show them how engaging learning is, and that the motivations for learning should be the child’s intrinsic interests, not an external reward.”

Don’t over-schedule your child. While you may want to supplement school with outside activities, be judicious about how much you let or urge your child to do. Kids need downtime as much as they may need to pursue extra-curricular activities. “If a child has homework and organized sports and a music lesson and is part of a youth group in church or synagogue, it can quickly become a joyless race from one thing to another. Therefore, monitor your child to see that he is truly enjoying what he is doing. If he isn’t, cut something off the schedule,” advises Michael Thompson, Ph.D.

Keep TV to a minimum. “Watching lots of TV does not give children the chance to develop their own interests and explore on their own, because it controls the agenda,” advises Diane Levin, Ph.D. “However, unstructured time with books, toys, crafts and friends allows children to learn how to be in charge of their agenda, and to develop their own interests, skills, solutions and expertise.”

Learn something new yourself. Learning something new yourself is a great way to model the learning process for your child. Take up a new language or craft, or read about an unfamiliar topic. Show your child what you are learning and how you may be struggling. You’ll gain a better understanding of what your child is going through and your child may learn study skills by watching you study. You might even establish a joint study time.