This point
is a three hour mini-seminar and audio series, but I will try to summarize it
in a couple of brief paragraphs! When we began homeschooling many years ago,
even with only one little son, we found ourselves overwhelmed by activity. Ray
and I were both working on our master’s degrees. We were active in church. We
were homeschooling my sister and helping others homeschool. We lived close to
extended family who needed and wanted our attention (including younger siblings
at home).
One day we sat down to solve our time and activity dilemma, and we
made a list of all of the things that could/did fill our evenings—things we
needed to do (meetings, etc.), things we should do (visit elderly
grandparents), things we wanted to do, and things that were automatically built
in (overtime, church services, etc.). When we examined our list, the total
evenings that could potentially be filled came to sixty—if we did everything we
could/should/would!
Armed with that calendar and prioritizing help from
marriage and family teaching we had received, we learned how to prioritize. We
looked at the things that we wanted to say yes to—and said yes to them. We
looked at the things that we could say no to—and said no to them. We applied
the mantra that “when you say yes to something (or someone), you are saying no
to something (or someone) else.” We asked ourselves who we truly wanted to say
yes and no to—and determined early in our marriage that we did not want to say
no to our immediate family (our children and each other) just because we were
saying yes to someone else.
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