Thursday, October 30, 2014

Successfully Juggling Husband, Children and Home


If you’re anything like me {the joy filled wife}, when you ponder the infamous characteristics of Proverbs 31’s “Wife of Noble Character,” it’s hard not to feel like you’re falling painfully short of the ideal. In our striving to be the helpmeet God intended us to be, it’s not always so cut and dry trying to live out these principles in a 21st century world where there are so many distractions and scenarios to contend with. There seems to be a finer line and a tighter rope we women walk in this day and age as we face the detriment that the feminist movement has brought about and how it has impacted generations of women by blurring the lines of our clearly defined Biblical role in marriage and family.

SETTING THE SCENE

My husband is the owner of a company. He is a visionary, a command man, and a dreamer through and through. He not only welcomes challenges, but he thrives on them. He is a man in constant pursuit of victory. My husband’s primary love languages are Quality Time and Acts of Service. The Acts of Service portion of my husband’s love language is manifested in two ways: Home Management and Company Management. My husband thrives in orderly environments where things are kept up to his standards and level of expectation. His mind becomes chaotic if he walks into a home that’s dirty, untidy, and void of a prepared meal. He wants his household managed well and to walk in to a peaceful environment surrounded by happy faces. He wants to know that there will always be clean socks in his drawer and that his suits and ties aren’t spending week-long vacations at the dry cleaners. My husband holds me to an extremely high standard as a wife and mom and, although it can feel overwhelming at times, it has made me a much stronger woman. 

PRIORITIZING & TIME-MANAGEMENT

When it comes to business, my husband is a Visionary that deeply desires my participation in every project he is working on. He also craves my feedback. He feels neglected if I am not playing a significant role in the growth of his company and sharing in both his successes and failures. He has told me on numerous occasions that the moral of the company is significantly higher when I play an active role in the day to day. But how to fulfill my husband’s wishes and still live out God’s design for me as keeper of the home? 

Back in the olden days, most families ran some sort of business. From ranching to farming to owning a deli or a local pharmacy, every member of the family participated in some aspect of the work that needed to be done to earn a living. The husband’s job was usually to do the grunt work and the majority of the work that needed to be done away from home. The wife took care of the household and was responsible for teaching her children by having them participate in chores and errands to help keep things running on their end. Back then, children knew how to work hard from a very young age because they participated in the work done at home. Today, many children grow up never learning the value of giving their all and working toward a goal. My husband and I never wanted our children to grow up lazy or entitled, so, along with lots of fun and learning, one of my jobs is to teach our children how to work hard.

As you can imagine, managing both a household and a company well is a tall order. With the priority being for me to be at home during the daytime with our children, my husband and I decided to have me spend a couple of hours in the evenings after dinner conducting company interviews and working with any females in the company that need training. My husband uses this time to spend special Daddy time with our kids. They look forward to that time so much. After my meetings are complete, we pray with our children, put them to bed, and spend an hour together before heading to bed ourselves. We take Sundays off to spend time together as a family outdoors and at church.

Except for an errand or two that my husband may ask me to run with the kids after breakfast {a great opportunity to learn people skills}, my husband handles all the daytime business work. That will change in the next year or so when he will be transitioning most of the daytime work to someone else and take a step back and mostly oversee things

SACRIFICING

My participation in the growth of my husband’s company was so important to him that, when we came to the conclusion that maintaining a home of our size made it extremely challenging for me to help him during this time of growth and transition in his company, he solved the problem by moving us into a home ⅓ the size of our previous one. As you can imagine, that took me a significantly less amount of time to maintain and freed me up to show my husband love and respect in the way he wanted it most. I could have complained to him about downsizing, even though I know it’s only temporary until after the transition next year, but I was grateful that my husband took my concerns to heart and made a way for me to show him respect by partnering with him, without neglecting my responsibilities at home. Every marriage and situation is different, but we serve a wonderfully wise God who is able to sort out even the greatest predicament to accomplish His will in our marriage and life. 

In closing, I want to say that one of the best pieces of advice I ever received regarding time management is from my mother in law. She told me, “If you want something to get done, give it to a busy person.” We’ve all heard that a body in motion stays in motion and a body at rest has a hard time getting going. That’s why it’s so important that we truly follow Titus 5:2’s example and stay busy at home. When a person is not busy {and particularly a woman}, gossip, dissatisfaction, impure thoughts, depression, anxiety, and laziness tend to be a bigger struggle for us. Especially depression and dissatisfaction. That’s why I personally stay away from wasting my time on social media and surfing the web. My time has more value and I feel better about myself when I’m not wasting a lot of time doing unproductive things. On the flip side, I am also careful not to overbook my schedule with outside activities.

TYPICAL DAILY SCHEDULE

 1. Get the children up early and ready for the morning/day.
    2. Put the kids in the car and turn on praise music after Daddy prays for our day.
    3. Get to the location of our first errand 45 minutes early so we can sit in the car and practice Bible verses, verbally discuss our objectives and schedule for the day, and then I do my personal devotions while the kids read quietly by themselves.
    4. Strive to complete errand(s) within 1 hour and set a goal with the kids of how many people we are going to smile at, be friendly to, or give a sincere compliment.
    5. Let the kids run around at the park for 30-45 minutes.
    6. Head home and put in/take out a load of laundry before making lunch.
    7. Kids complete schoolwork while I do some heavier house cleaning.
    8. Kids go down for a nap and I spend that time responding to company voice mails, texts, emails, putting away laundry, prepping dinner, working out, etc. If I have finished all of my work and have extra time before the kids get up, I will spend a little bit of time reading, commenting, or writing on a couple of blogs. That is the only “me time” I really ever spend online at this phase of life.
    9. Play with the kids, read a story, continue prepping dinner, 
and have the kids help me with remaining housekeeping.
  10. Prepare and eat dinner as a family and then I get dressed 
for business and my husband spends time with the kids.
  11. Once I get home, I quickly do the dishes and then 
we pray with the kids and put them to bed.
12. My husband and I spend time together and then go to bed.

She looketh well to the ways of her household, 
and eateth not the bread of idleness.
Proverbs 31:27

photo source

Comments (23)

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Have you ever heard of the site: moneysavingmom.com

I think you and your readers would greatly benefit from her tips - everything from time management to surviving on a grocery budget of $40/week. Her story is incredible and I always think that you would love her site! :-)
I have a couple questions....how long is it between lunch and nap? And do your kiddos do their schoolwork independently while you clean or is it kind of you go back and forth between cleaning and answering questions, teaching etc? Maybe yours are littler than mine, but it takes us from about 8am until an hour or so after lunch to get all of our school in-longer if we have an extra long science experiment or art project etc. I have absolutely no time to do any sort of heavy cleaning until Saturday. During the week we just maintain-do dishes, pick-up etc. it just doesn't seem like from your schedule that there's very much actual teaching going on? Totally not criticizing or accusing-just trying to figure out how you do it! :)
1 reply · active 517 weeks ago
Hi Ann,

Everyone's situation and family size are different. My schedule doesn't serve as a template, but as an inspiration to really schedule your day so you can prioritize the important things first. If your schedule is working well for you, stick with it! You definitely don't need to change things to look like my day, when we both probably lead very different lives and have different obligations. The point of the post is to give an example of things I chose to give up and ways I refined my life so I could bless my husband without neglecting my other Biblical responsibilities.

Many women lament their lack of time and energy for their husbands and children and really struggle with productivity. That is often times the case because of lack of proper scheduling and wasting too much time on non-productive things like social media.

Hope that clarifies things!
What an interesting testimony of family unity & togetherness! I think it sounds very good! The only thing I noticed is something I've been hearing from others lately as well...many people think of social media as "me time". Now, I understand very well how demanding of one's time that young children & a husband can be & perhaps social media should be quite limited at times. However, I believe we should examine out thinking regarding "friends" & "me time". Jesus emphasized that we "love our neighbors as ourselves" & that we "go into all the nations making disciples". Social media can be great opportunities to fellowship with other Christians, to offer merciful & kind comments in a harsh world, post Bible verses, etc. Maybe we should avoid social media if we regard it as "me time", but otherwise, make the most of every opportunity to spread love & the gospel. And of course, we should prioritize loving our families! (Just what has been on my mind lately) Love & prayers, in Jesus, Cynthia
1 reply · active 543 weeks ago
Hi Cynthia,

I think it's wonderful that you've been able to make social media a way of ministering to others. That is a true gift, but it is very rare. I have worked in ministry with women for a long time and I can tell you that you are truly the exception. For the majority of women, social media has mostly negative consequences in their lives. There is constant comparison going on and the tendency to provoke jealousy and dissatisfaction. Most everyone portrays only the seemingly good things in their lives on social media, wanting to create an image that is far from the reality of their life. For the majority of women, depression and discontentment are brought about from spending a lot of time on social media.

If someone is truly able to not be influenced negatively by social media and it doesn't take priority over other responsibilities getting done, it may be fine. But I find that it is far too detrimental to the vast majority of women out there to be something I will ever encourage most women to participate in.
How many kids? What are their ages?
1 reply · active 543 weeks ago
Hi Cynthia,

For privacy purposes, I'm not able to give specifics that would make myself easier to identify. There are a lot of people out there who want to stir up trouble for me and my husband has allowed me to minister to other wives in this way, but with the rule that I not list any specifics that would make me easier to identify.

My encouragement to you would be to ask the Lord to give you wisdom as you are putting together your schedule. If you have several children and certain things take much longer to get done, have an older child help you accomplish tasks with the younger ones and leave yourself extra time in case unforeseen hiccups occur. No one is going to have an identical family situation to mine, so this is not meant to be a rigid example. The purpose is just to encourage women to take a good look at their schedule and make sure time is set aside to accomplish the most important things and that less productive or important tasks are filled in last, and only if there's room. The goal is to have the time and energy to bless our husbands, without neglecting our role as mom in the process.
I too don't require much "me time" at this stage in my life. Twice a week my husband watches my little ones so I can have an hour-long soak in the tub, and that's about it. My husband has also repeatedly asked me to focus solely on the family and household, and let him deal with the business and financial aspect, until our kids are at least old enough to be a little bit self-sufficient. It's wonderful.

But I found your comment about social media very convicting. I do spend too much time on here. It will be my next area to minimize. :)
1 reply · active 543 weeks ago
MrsMike,

Truth be told, I am passionate about encouraging women to reconsider social media because it was an area that I had delayed obedience in. The Lord had convicted me for years about not participating in it because of what it brought out of me and others, but I kept making excuses in my mind of why I shouldn't. They were always things that appeared legitimate, such as keeping in touch with family members or old friends, or for uploading family photos, but those excuses didn't validate my disobedience. What good is keeping in touch with others over Facebook when it can be done through email or phone? And who cares about storing family photos if what I am getting in return is a greater struggle with sin? It's been a few years now since I left the social media scene and, 2 weeks after doing so, when I realized how much more time I had to focus on more important things, I truly wish I had obeyed the Lord on it right away.
Thank you joyfilled wife. I have three young kids and a husband. In my house, by the time I get ready, cook breakfast, feed myself and the kids, do the dishes, it's already 10am and I feel like I've done nothing meaningful all morning. I've been praying to God for the past several months to show me how to better manage my time, so this is very helpful. I have a few followup questions if you don't mind, just to understand this better.
How old are your kids? Would you mind detailing what time you yourself wake up and get ready, what time you make breakfast, what time you and the kids are done eating breakfast, what time you eat dinner, what time the kids are done with lunch, what time do they go down for naps and when do they wake up, what time do you cook dinner, what time you begin and finish dinner, what time you get home from your evening meetings, what time you bathe the kids, what time you and your husband go to bed? And 7&8 seem like they would take me a very long time to accomplish. So any tips on 7&8 would be appreciated too. Thanks,
6 replies · active 543 weeks ago
(1 of 2)

Hi Nancy,

As I recently stated in a comment, I need to honor my husband's wishes to not give exact details that would give away my identify. There have been a lot of troublesome things occurring to other wonderful Christian bloggers and my husband wants the exact details of our family and life to remain as anonymous as possible. I'm sure you can understand his desire to protect us.

One important thing I have learned while becoming an organized person is to keep yourself on track, but not get so bogged down by scheduling details that you become paranoid. I'm a perfectionist and a little OCD by nature, so I tend to gravitate toward charts and spreadsheets. When I do that, though, I spend so much time and energy focused on doing everything so perfectly that I don't leave room for God to move and for spontaneous special moments to occur within the family. I have general timelines that tend to pan out for me daily, but it's never identical from one day to the next. I become less caring or sensitive to my children when I obsess over exact times. Instead, I make sure I free myself from too many outside obligations and leave lots of room for hiccups to happen. Very, very few people really thrive by being overly structured. The goal here is to adopt the spirit of organizing and prioritizing without making it an idol.

I am usually up by 7am or so and out the door by 8:15. I arrive to my first destination by 8:45 most mornings and then proceed to my errands by 9:30/10:00. I try and get all of my errands done by 11:30 or noon and then spend about 30 minutes at the park so the kids can burn some energy. After the park, we either head home for lunch, or have already eaten it at the park. Based on how the kids are feeling, we will do schoolwork before nap, after nap, or half of it before and half of it after. It doesn't really matter which way it turns out. Every day is a little different. My kids typically nap for about an hour and a half.

Cleaning: When I say "deep cleaning" I really mean any cleaning that the kids realistically can't do or can't help me with. I accomplish those things after nap time, while the kids are playing or finishing homework. My trick for cleaning is to clean as you go and to put things away after use. If we are maintaining all the time, there will be very little "deep cleaning" that needs to get done. Even things like scrubbing tubs isn't time-consuming if it gets a basic scrub once a week.

Regarding meals, I always think that Crock Pot meals are the way to go. If you don't have a lot of time for prep because you have a lot of children who need attention with schoolwork, keep it simple with a roast and seasoning, throw in some carrots and potatoes, etc. Healthy meals don't have to take a long time. You can also cut book work short that day and have them practice home economics by helping you prep dinners for the week. Prepare them and freeze them and then put them in the Crock Pot each day.

Dinner for us is not always at the same time each day. I really follow my husband's lead here. We do a lot of snacking and tiny bites throughout the day, so no one is starving and everyone can be a little flexible about dinnertime. Sometimes dinner is at 6, so I can be ready for an interview at 7. Sometimes I have a couple of interviews at 6:30 and we eat at 7:45. It doesn't make a big difference to us because we have learned to be flexible with our season of life and our kids truly don't care as long as they aren't left hungry. Sometimes, if I am having an unusually long evening with interviewing, my husband may have dinner with the kids and I will have a nice salad before I begin. Most of our years as a family we had dinner together at pretty much the same time every night. Since my husband's company is in a big growth and transition time and he wants my help as the shift is made, our schedule is not so consistent. We do make sure to take Sundays off to spend as a family. It is very rare for us to do anything with business on a Sunday. We need that time to recharge together and enjoy some leisure time.
(2 of 2)

Yesterday was an "off" day because there were some unforeseen things that came up and I didn't get done with errands and park time until 2pm. I was going to go home and put the kids down for a nap at that point, but my husband said he wanted to take us out to lunch, so we did that instead. I didn't end up getting home until 3:30pm and, as you can imagine, the kids were more than ready for a nap. They were a bit grumpy when they awoke, but that's okay. Most days aren't like that. Everyone was fine by the time dinner came and I was able to get some nice cleaning done, a shower, and some important book reading in before the kids were up. We have raised our children to be flexible from birth, even though we have some consistent things we try and implement for those of our kids who thrive on consistency, and it's been a true blessing.

#7- My kids require me to be very involved in their schoolwork. Once they understand a concept, they can do it on their own somewhat, but still need supervision so they don't repeat mistakes. If book work takes your family longer, adjust your schedule accordingly. If breakfast and getting dressed in the morning is taking up more time than it should, have your children layout their clothes the night before and have some healthy breakfasts prepared ahead of time. I am a big believer in not over-emphasizing book work. I think that too many people are focused on academics and tend to neglect the more important things to learn, like people skills, Scripture, praise and worship, encouraging others, and wisdom. Each and everything I have allowed in our family schedule is an opportunity for education. My husband and I constantly get compliments on how friendly, loving, articulate, and polite our children are to adults and children alike. That's not by accident or a product of their personality. We have emphasized those characteristics from birth and we practice them constantly throughout the day. Kids love to learn through music and movement, so I make sure we worship every morning and have some physical time to get out and play and make friends.

#8- My list of things I do for #8 is not a list of all the things I do every day at that time. They are just some ideas of things that may occupy that time on any given day. Yesterday, for example, I spent that time reading (one of the most important personal things I do every day), showering, putting the last load of laundry in the dryer, and responding to business voicemails. Today, on the other hand, I spent it on the phone with technical support for my cell phone, having to deal with one of my children who was constantly getting up from their nap time, putting appointments on my calendar, and blogging. I got most of my business calls done on my drive home, since my kids fell asleep in the backseat, so that was off my plate for this stretch of time. Every day is a little different, but I've learned to be flexible, without allowing priorities to be neglected.

I hope some of that helps!
Yes, that helps a lot. Thank you so much for taking the time (I know how precious that is) to respond so thoroughly to me. Just one last quick question, because mornings are the biggest challenge for me- what does your family usually eat for breakfast and do you and the kids eat it at home or in the car? I get up at the same time you do, and I start cooking eggs and oatmeal around 8, and then the whole morning is lost by the time everyone is served and done eating. I will look into what I can make ahead of time.
Where my kiddos eat really depends on the time we get them up. If we had an usually late night, I'll get the food prepared before waking them and they will either eat at home briefly or sometimes we bring food in the car, provided it's not something particularly messy. Whole wheat or multigrain peanut butter or almond butter toast is a standard breakfast food. Hard-boiled egg is another one I'd recommend for you, because you can prepare it once a week, refrigerate it, and have the kids eat it quickly in the mornings, without you having to cook breakfast or eggs from scratch. Same nutrition but less time and no dishes. :) You can pair hard-boiled eggs and PB toast with an orange and be on your way.

We don't do a ton of fruits at our home because a couple of us have hypoglycemia and having too much fruit causes big problems for us. If we are in a super big hurry and something came up to prevent me from being able to give the kids a bigger breakfast, we'll do Cheerios or healthy multigrain cereal. We don't buy the sugary stuff pretty much ever, so the oat type plain cereals are good on the go or for snacking. On mornings when we have extra time (like Sundays or Mondays), we like to make steel cut oats with some cinnamon, vanilla extract, and a little agave. That's a nice hearty breakfast. Steel cut oats (and hot breakfasts) take a bit more prep work than my husband wants me spending time on most mornings at this phase of life, so they are limited to a couple of times a week. I'm sure, when things slow down, we will be back to eating that way most mornings.

I think the trick is to eat small meals frequently. I feel like I'm feeding my kids quite often, but only small amounts. Carry some raw almonds or other nuts with you, some sugar snap peas and baby carrots, some apple slices and the occasional natural string cheese. Because we snack so much, the only meal we eat that has a meal-sized amount of food is dinner. Even then, we don't eat huge portions. This keeps a healthy weight for all of us because we aren't stretching out our stomach so much when we eat.

Hope that helps!
By the way, I loved what you said about giving your kids the opportunity to practice speaking to people, that it is not just an aspect of the personality they were born with, that is something that can be successfully worked on. I will start doing that.
It's made a HUGE difference in our children and some of them have more naturally friendly personalities and some are more serious or shy by nature. All of them are very friendly to others and very complimentary. I definitely recommend!
Does The Joy Filled Wife have a blog? If so, what is it? I've searched and searched and cannot find it. Thank you!!
4 replies · active 543 weeks ago
Hi Beth A,

Thanks for asking. You couldn't locate a blog because I don't have one. :) Although I'm sure having a blog would be a great opportunity for me at some point, right now my schedule is so full with my husband and children that having one would mean that I have to sacrifice more important things. Perhaps sometime in the future I will. In the mean time, I feel blessed to be able to contribute on blogs like Lori's.
Oh, okay, I see! Thank you for the reply! I'll look forward to reading more posts from you as I happen upon them :-) Many blessings to you and your family!
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thejoyfilledwife · 543 weeks ago

Thanks, Beth. If you want to read my past posts, Lori has a category section for it on the right side of the page that you can click on. It's listed right after all of her recipes.

Blessings to you and yours as well!
Great, found it! Thanks again, thejoyfilledwife!
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FREEINDEED · 543 weeks ago

Joyfilled wife,
I have been praying for you lately, having not seen you much in the comments, etc. I imagined life was busy and you were handling more important things :) God Bless, sister.
1 reply · active 543 weeks ago
FreeIndeed,

Great to hear from you, friend! Thank you for your faithful prayers. The Lord is blessing my family big time and this is a big time of transition and growth for us. I've never been so busy in my lifetime, but it's all for the glory of God. Thanks for reaching out. You are always such a cherished blog friend to me.

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