Kristina Lunde

The Lord is my strength and my song.
Psalm 118:14a

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January 21, 2017 by Kristina Lunde Leave a Comment

A Quick Morning Prayer

However chaotic my children’s morning—grabbing lunches and backpacks, riding in the car, walking along a sidewalk, or scrambling to catch the bus—I prayed this prayer with them before they went to school:

Dear Lord,

We pray for eyes to see as Jesus does,

Ears to hear as Jesus does,

And lips to speak the kind, loving words of Jesus.

In His name we pray. Amen.

Photo: ambermb/pixabay
Photo: ambermb/pixabay

What a privilege it is to pray with our children. In the craziness of our busy mornings, may God help us lift up our hearts and attitudes in prayer. As role models for our children, we join with them to pray for God’s help to be more like Jesus.

Tim S. (former associate youth pastor at North Valley Christian Fellowship in San Jose, CA) shared this prayer with me, explaining how his mother prayed for her children everyday before school. May this prayer bless your family as it has ours for 15+ years. Thanks Tim and Tim’s mom!

Filed Under: Parenting, Prayer Tagged With: parenting, prayer

December 30, 2016 by Kristina Lunde Leave a Comment

Christmas Traditions: Create, Continue, Treasure

Family Christmas traditions are to be created, continued, and treasured. Here are some ideas of what works and what doesn’t in our family:

Stay up

After the last day of school before Christmas vacation, let the kids stay up as long as they want. (Very exciting for grade school kids, but high schoolers will likely do this anyway.)

Camp out

As a family, spend the night camped out in sleeping bags in front of the lighted Christmas tree. Once the little ones fall asleep, parents can sneak off to a real bed.

Take candid photos

“Kodak moments,” a phrase named after the camera company, refers to ideal moments captured in a photo. You anticipate, strategize, raise your expectations, and spend far too much time maneuvering and attempting to get that perfect picture. In our family, that rarely works. Instead, take lots of candid photos and you may be surprised with the precious moments you capture.

Start a new tradition

Make a tradition out of something your family does, no matter how seemingly insignificant. When our kids were little, we took pictures as they sat on the couch and opened their stockings on Christmas morning. Our stockings have silly little practical gifts and chocolate, but the photo became a cherished tradition. If I ever get organized, I would make a time lapse of all those photos—growing kids and the same couch over two decades.

Pray for others

Pray through the Christmas cards you receive. After we eat dinner, we each take several cards and pray for those families. This is a great way to ask God’s blessing on our friends and family, especially those who live far away. I enjoy introducing my kids to people they do not remember or have never met. Every year, I try to do this and am always met by resistance—from everyone in my family. Sometimes this takes me until February and I end up praying alone, but I think this is an important tradition.

May God bless you as you create, keep, and treasure your Christmas traditions!

Filed Under: Parenting Tagged With: Christmas, parenting, traditions

September 26, 2016 by Kristina Lunde Leave a Comment

Empty Nest: Ode to the Shoe Pile

shoe-pile-not
No shoe pile!

Shoe pile, shoe pile, empty nest at the door

Where have you gone, shoe pile?

I can actually see the floor!

 

Shoe pile, shoe pile, gone from the hall

No more tripping hazards

Threatening to cause a fall.

 

Shoe pile, shoe pile, that huge display

Seemed like every pair they owned

Was always in the way.

 

Shoe pile, shoe pile, overflowed into the room,

When the kids’ friends came over,

Showed who was visiting whom.

 

Shoe pile, shoe pile, always in disarray

No more dirt and melted snow

From an overfull boot tray.

 

Shoe pile, shoe pile, missing from the entry

Look, there’s tile and a throw rug

So much else to see.

 

Shoe pile, shoe pile, removed from the scene

Now I can thoroughly sweep and mop

And the floor might stay clean.

 

Shoe pile, shoe pile carried off to the U

The kids can deal with their own shoe pile

I’ve got better things to do!

Filed Under: Parenting Tagged With: empty nest, parenting, shoe pile

August 19, 2016 by Kristina Lunde Leave a Comment

AWANA Closing Program: Preschooler Distractions

The AWANA closing program was set to begin, and children, parents, and grandparents gathered inside the church for the celebration. I was on the lookout to welcome my section of Cubbies and help them cope with their preschooler distractions.

C’s mother, ready to confront her son’s weekly bout of separation anxiety, carried him over to me. Kicking and crying in his usual protest, C resisted when I peeled him out of his mother’s arms for our prearranged hand-off. I always waited for his mom’s timing and cue that she was ready for her son to separate; our weekly dance resulted in a calm C, usually within minutes. We had never handed off in front of an audience before, and I realized how cruel I must look, pulling a crying child out of mom’s loving arms. However, not long after C was in my arms and we sat down, he laughed as I distracted him with silly conversation.

K came in with her transition object, only this time it was a doll instead of her usual baby blanket. K’s mother, the exhaustion of strong-willed children evident on her face, was coping with simultaneous challenges from all three of her children. Oldest boy was testing limits and mom was implementing consequences presented even before the evening’s outing. Middle daughter was refusing to sit with her AWANA Sparks group. Not to be outdone, K, the youngest, began to tantrum when mom tried to sit elsewhere. Mom settled into place with our group of Cubbies, resigned to K’s refusal to separate and committed to ensure that her older children stayed with their groups.

As I calmed C on my lap, I looked over to see K present one of her rolling-on-the-floor tantrums. I usually dealt with that in the Cubbies classroom, where K’s occasional tantrums were short-lived and self-extinguished once her parents were out of sight and she received nothing but strange stares from her peers. Since mom was a captive audience, this particular session lasted longer and the doll became a drama prop.

“You are a good mom! Hang in there,” I encouraged K’s mother with a pat on her arm. It sounded so feeble and I wanted to encourage her further, but I had to tend to the rest of my preschooler group.

In bounded A, deliberately shaking her cupped hands together, a smug smirk of accomplishment spread across her sweet, three-year-old face. Sensing that this was likely a live one, snuck into the sanctuary for the big AWANA finale, I asked what was in her hands.

“A bug!” she proclaimed triumphantly, gracing me with a short peek as she cracked her otherwise clenched hands to reveal a black winged insect. Knowing A’s strong will and desire for peer attention, I plotted my strategy carefully. I acknowledged the bug, without praising the accomplishment excessively. Having survived my own strong-willed, non-insect-averse children, I considered the consequences of a loose bug and the damage control that would ensue. My strategy was to give her a choice.
“OK, since you can’t bring the bug on stage with you, you have two choices. You can either bring the bug outside, or you can put it in this envelope,” I challenged her, grabbing an offering envelope. (Use # 257 for an offering envelope.)

“I want to go outside,” she demanded.

“Well, I can’t take you outside now; we are all going on stage to sing the Cubbies’ song. You’ll have to sit here until I come back and can take you.”

After our leader’s cue, the Cubbies stood up in preparation to take the stage. Knowing that A would not want to miss out on a fun group activity, I offered her the open envelope. She hurriedly dumped the bug inside and ran to the aisle with her peers. The kids in our row eyed me carefully to monitor what happened with the bug. Bug firmly wrapped in the envelope and tucked under the row ahead of us (to prevent catastrophic smashing of A’s trophy), I herded my group of cherubs to the front.

After wild gestures, whispered guidance, and a few rescued potential runaways, the group of sixteen Cubbies was ready to perform. Facing their parents, families, and friends, the children sang the Cubbies’ song and recited their Bible verses.

Dear God, may these precious children always leave behind transitional objects, separation anxiety, bugs, and other distractions in order to focus on your word. Amen.

Disclaimer: No Cubbies were harmed in the pre-program drama annotated above. The program preparation strategies described do not necessarily represent AWANA guidelines.

(Originally posted April 2016.)

 

Filed Under: Parenting Tagged With: AWANA, preschoolers, separation anxiety, tantrums

August 19, 2016 by Kristina Lunde Leave a Comment

Twenty Years Ago: Bringing Our Firstborn Baby Home

Twenty years ago today was Easter Sunday: a beautiful celebration of the reason and purpose for our faith. Our family marked a secondary celebration of joy and new purpose that day: the transporting home of our precious firstborn baby girl, born two days earlier.

New Daddy completed his first baby-wrangling session to prepare the newborn. A hat and onesie ensemble, pre-planned months beforehand, outfitted the little one for the trip. Layers of blankets warded off the potential spring chill. Tiny Girl’s new infant seat, equipped with straps for every little limb, served its first mission.

A nursing assistant transported New Mommy by wheelchair to the hospital entrance. It seemed like weeks, not days, since she had been outside for fresh air. Her cautious counterpart, New Daddy, retrieved the car and parked in the front circle for delicate cargo pick up. Tiny Girl, ensconced in her safety seat, was gingerly placed, buckled in, and secured for transport.

Fluid overloaded, bandaged, tired New Mommy maneuvered into place and stretched exhausted limbs to fasten her seatbelt. The twenty minute ride home seemed forever. New Mommy cringed at the bumps that jarred her beaten, scarred body.

Both parents, so new to the worries and cares of family life, considered the what-ifs. What if we crash? What if we go off the road? What if backward-facing baby has an emergency in the car seat?

But Tiny Girl slept through the uneventful ride home. And so the new family began.

(Originally posted April 2016.)

Filed Under: Parenting Tagged With: bringing baby home, firstborn, parenting

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