Families, communities, and
nations are strengthened when the rising generation is taught to work. The most
important work that we can do is known as family work. Family work is that work
which is done in the home to comfort, protect, and provide for the family. It
is sometimes known as “housework,” and it includes cooking, cleaning,
gardening, and everything else that is done in the home for the benefit of the
family.
Kathleen Slaugh Bahr and Cheri A
Loveless wrote an article titled “Family Work.” They shared some history about
the changes in family work. They told how family members once worked together
for the good of the family. Then the age of industrialization came along and
caused changes in the family.
Where father, mother, and children
once worked together, industrialization took father and often other members of
the family out of the home and into the factory. Now most fathers and a large
percentage of mothers work outside the home, and children have changed from
being an economic asset to pampered consumers who feel entitled to everything
they desire.
The authors suggest that we follow
the example of Jesus Christ and served His Apostles in a very demeaning task.
He knelt and washed the feet of each Apostle to give them an example of how to
serve their fellow human beings. (See John 13:12-15.)
Family work is often “mindless,
menial, repetitive, and demeaning,” but it is the type of work that is
necessary. When we do family work, we serve the members of our family, whether
it is in preparing a meal, doing the laundry, or cleaning the house. Even
though life has greatly changed since families worked together all day every
day for the good of the family, there are some ways where families can still
gain the blessings of doing family work. The authors suggest the following five
ways that families can work together.
Tilling
the Soil. We can teach meaningful life lessons to our children while
gardening even though it is may be more cost effective to buy our tomatoes and
peas from the grocery store. Many discussions of important topics can take
place between parent and child while planting seeds or pulling weeds. One
important life lesson is the law of the harvest – we reap what we sow.
Exemplifying
the Attitudes We Want Our Children to Have. Children and youth adopt the
attitudes of their parents. If we want our children to appreciate a clean and
orderly home, we must appreciate a clean and orderly home. If we want our
children to appreciate a beautiful green lawn and lovely gardens, we must show
them by our words and actions that we do. Whatever the attitudes we wish our
children to have, we must develop them first.
Refusing
Technology that Interferes with Togetherness. Technology has improved many
areas of family live. No one will argue that doing the laundry on a washboard
or with a wringer washing machine is better than the modern washing machines,
and most people appreciate the modern dishwashing machines. However, there are
technological improvements that may decrease the opportunities to spend time
together as a family. Therefore, parents are wise to consider how any
scientific “improvement” may affect their family for good or bad.
Insisting Gently that Children Help.
Most
parents find it easier to do a task ourselves rather than take the time to
teach the skill to children. However, we are losing valuable opportunities to
spend quality and quantity time with them. With time and careful mentorship,
children can learn to do the task as well or better than we do it ourselves, and they will gain greater
self-esteem with each new skill that they learn.
Avoiding a Business Mentality at
Home. The
home is different than the workplace, and children are not employees. A parent
can mentor their child in a much different way that a boss can train an
employee. Some parents believe that they should pay their children for chores
around the home, while others believe that work should be fun. While working
with family members can be enjoyable, it is still work. Children should be
taught to work with the family because they are part of the family and not
because they will receive any money.
The authors say that parents should
work side by side with their children and not simply assign chores to children
while the parent does something else. They quoted the following words from President
Gordon B. Hinckley.
Children need to work with their
parents, to wash dishes with the, to mop floors with them, to mow lawns, to
prune trees and shrubbery, to paint and fix up, to clean up, and to do a
hundred other things in which they will learn that labor is the price of
cleanliness, progress, and prosperity. (See “Four Simple Things to Help Our Families and Our Nations,” Ensign, September
1996, p. 7.)
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