If asked to pinpoint one thing we
thought we were doing well in parenting, ignoring our many shortcomings of course, bedtime routines of reading and
praying together would have to be a star on our chart. There is something special about
everyone coming around a story together and then praying to top it off. The whole house seems happier when we’re
spending this time together. Lots of parents share this routine, so this is nothing new, but the fact that we still read to our big boys was something that took intentionality for us. I admit, there are some nights when "getting to it" requires a personal pep talk and second wind of energy, but there is not one time that I ever read to my kids that returned void of warm fuzzies and thankfulness for the time well-spent.
Our joy of reading together actually started before children arrived. Thanks to the 20 hour drive between our home in South Carolina to my side of the family in Minnesota, and the 6 hours to My Husband’s family in West Virginia, we have always had long stretches of time to kill. On such trips, the Hubs and I have shared together such titles as Tuesdays with Morrie and Angela’s Ashes. Before there was www.audible.com there were books on tape or CD, but when we didn’t have a recorded book, we would read to each other. Wild concept, I know – actually reading to each other. I admit we would pause while passing through the mountains of Ashville, NC, or Elkhorn Mountain of West Virginia. The switchbacks, narrow passes, and 18-wheelers make a prime recipe for motion sickness. But aside from those mountainous passes, our journeys are mostly straight open road and easy reading.
Reading to the Belly. Pregnant with our first guy. I know, it's such a flattering shot, ha ha. |
The Hubs reading with the Big Boys, N and A while wearing his "Peter Jackson Glasses," February 2004 |
The Twins, S and Z, and Me. |
Still reading with the Big Boys, A and N with the Hubs. |
I felt like we had a connection back that I didn’t know we’d lost. It now spurns conversations about the books as well as subjects beyond the pages. We laugh with the characters in the books, like when the very valiant Reepicheep takes on Eustace in The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, or we talk about why a particular storyline is so very sad, like in Number the Stars dealing with World War II and the Holocaust. And we teach about being generous and helpful like the rats in Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of Nimh, or about being brave like Mrs. Frisby herself.
The bonus to the end of our
chapter for the evening is the prayer time we share. Our nightly prayers began as little prayers
for our sweet babies. We’d recite “Now I
Lay Me Down To Sleep,” and then we would ask the Lord to bless their rest
through the night. Over the years,
though, as the big boys have grown, and the twins have faced life-threatening
food allergies, they have become very real conversations with God. They often include a quick review of things
from the day that were special, and sometimes they include things that didn’t
go so well. If we’ve made a parenting
mistake, like accusing the wrong son of leaving his clothes on the floor, or
because we were extra irritable at dinner (you know, therapist couch material, ha!), this is usually the time when we
fess up, explain ourselves, and, when necessary, apologize. The boys include requests for people we love,
and we give thanks to God for healings and blessings he’s given us. But for me, my prayer still ends with asking
the Lord to bless my guys’ rest, and to draw them close to himself…with the
added request that the Father would heal our sons’ allergies.
Bedtime is not the only time we read
and pray, but bed time and meal times are when it’s routine. Because of this routine for both reading and
praying, it makes the impromptu times in between become
more natural. They don’t think it’s
weird to grab a book and curl up with it or to stop for a second and pray for
the ambulance that just passed. But I
think the best thing about this whole reading and praying thing is that we’re
doing it together. Everyone is gathered
around the same thing at the same time. After a day of constant movement,
errands, conversations, chores, events, and more, for just a handful of minutes
per night we slowdown and connect. We
shut out the world, transporting ourselves somewhere else, and then we return to
reality to pray to the Father who makes it all
possible. It is indeed worth it to carve out the time to read and pray with our guys.
**Links to some articles I’ve read
recently that reinforce the idea that READING IS WONDERFUL!**"Raise a Lifelong Reader"
(The
title of the following article has little to do with the content. It's more about examining why boys don't get
into reading as much as girls, and some ideas about how to get that to change.)
"How to Talk to a Little Boy"
In the end, I did find this one
article that I thought was pretty helpful
“Praying with Children”