Friday, July 12, 2013

The Meanings and Blessings of Family Work

“Successful marriages and families are established and maintained on principles of… work.”
Today we see how parents are so eager to find success in their work and careers outside the home, but neglect the work they need to be doing in the home. Have so many people forgotten that the most important work we will ever do will be within the walls of our own home? (Harold B. Lee) The Family: A Proclamation to the World says that providing for the physical needs of children is a “sacred duty” and that work is one of the important principles upon which “successful marriages and families are established and maintained”. Caring for a spouse and children is a “solemn responsibility”. The greatest joy we will experience in life will come from our families, but to get that joy, we need to be working to strengthen our families.
Work brings a family closer together. It bonds family members as they experience and learn together in a good environment. “Ordinary household work that is often considered a waste of time can be a time of closeness and fun that strengthens family bonds and develops Christlike virtues…Family work provides endless opportunities to recognize and fill others’ needs. It thus teaches us to love and serve one another, inviting us to be like Jesus Christ” (Alan J. Hawkins, 2012).
I have four sisters in my family and we always had to work together in our home as we were given tasks to complete. From raking leaves in our yard to building a swing set for a family in need, my sisters and I learned how to cooperate and work as a team. Those shared experiences definitely strengthened our relationships and in those moments our love for each other grew. “When family members work together in the right spirit, a foundation of caring and commitment grows out of their shared experience” (Alan J. Hawkins, 2012). Working has helped me build relationships, not just with my family members, but with those around me as I have worked and served beside them. It has taught me the value of service and has helped me realize that I find the most joy in life when I’m serving others. Growing up with responsibilities has helped me learn forgiveness, love, compassion, unity, teamwork, compromise, and patience. “Family work provides endless opportunities to recognize and fill others’ needs. It thus teaches us to love and serve one another, inviting us to be like Jesus Christ” (Alan J. Hawkins, 2012).
Elder Neal A. Maxwell observed, “The divine attributes of love, mercy, patience, submissiveness, meekness, purity…cannot be developed in the abstract. These require the clinical experiences… Nor can these attributes be developed in a hurry”. My husband shares how he developed these divine attributes through his family experience: 
My mother became terminally ill with a rare disease while I was about 12 years old.  By the age of 16, it was bad enough that we moved to a new place so that we could accommodate my mother’s illness. A year after that my mother’s health became so bad that she required constant help, in doing all things.  As a 17 year old in high school, I was helping my mother go to the bathroom, brushing her teeth, giving sponge baths, and carrying her everywhere we went.  By the end of her life, about 3 months after I was 17, she became so sick that she couldn’t move at all. Her disease had run the full course and she had paralysis of her entire body.  She could only moan to speak, and her eyes were the main source of conversation.  The moan would get our attention and then she would look at what she needed.  During this time of my life, I found out what love was.  As I served her every need, I felt the love of service building deep into my roots.  My mother spent much of my early life teaching me to do many things.  She taught me math and science, how to read, and to choose right from wrong.  At the end she taught me more about life then she will ever know.  I learned to tell the difference between wants and needs, I learned to love and serve, and I learned how important the family really is as we all sustained one another.  My mother’s parting gift was to tie my family together and help us understand the concept of our eternal family.
 Through my husband’s experience, although difficult to go through, his character was strengthened by developing the divine attributes Elder Maxwell talked about: Love, patience, mercy, submissiveness, meekness, and purity. Family work truly shapes us toward divinity. 
I believe that work can be rewarding and build family relationships. My parents were big believers of this. They definitely taught me the value of work. It’s true that we are always teaching by example. Our kids are always watching and will learn from our behavior and attitude. I think it’s important to know the value of hard work even as a child. In this life we are actively working toward becoming the person we want to be, so work is an important principle to learn. I like the word proactive.  I find it interesting that when you look up this word in the dictionary it says it means to be in control of a situation or occurrence. When we are active in our lives—active in the gospel, in our families, church, community, work, etc… we are in control. When we let go and lose ourselves, we allow Satan to gain control over us and soon we find that we are following him and falling away from God. I feel bad for those who don’t learn of the value of work in their early years because it’s a major wake-up call later in life when they see how much work they actually need to do to achieve anything.
We always need to be active in our life because when we are working, we are learning, experiencing, and growing our character. When you know the value of hard work, you appreciate so much more in life. You know how to work for something you want and then find the joys in the accomplishment from those things. Little actions and pieces of work may not look important close up, but as one stands back and looks at their works as a whole, they can see the picture they’ve created of who they are and how they’ve chosen to live their life. Our works define us.

Growing up, I have many memories of my mother teaching my sisters and I how to cook. We would work together to make dinner, set the table, and gather the family to enjoy a meal as a family each night. I have adopted my mother’s love for cooking and look forward to the time that I can teach my children how to cook. When my grandmother passed away I inherited her recipes, many of which were her mothers. I decided to make a recipe book of my own and add all her recipes into it so I can give it to my daughter someday. 

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This post is all in reference to Chapter 21 of Successful Marriages and Families: Proclamation Principles and Research Perspectives, by Alan J. Hawkins, David C. Dollahite, and Thomas W. Draper (2012).
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