My daughter recently turned 16. I’m pretty laid back about things but the other day when she said she was ready to get her driving permit it hit me that she was really at that stage in her life. She needed several things to take with her to the DMV; her birth certificate, her social security card and a paper stating she is enrolled in school. Well, she did her part to get her school info but I kept dragging my feet getting her other documents. My mind started racing… What would she do if those documents just happened to be “lost.” Now I am not the type of mother to manipulate my daughter but it did run through my mind. What if the document thing didn’t pan out though….. what would be next? What would I stoop to?
I’ve made my list-16 ways to keep my daughter off of the road…
Tell her that all licensed drivers must spend a two year stint of public service driving daycare vans – and then top it off with horror stories of vomit and stinky diapers
Give her the keys to the car- a set from the lost and found at Wal-mart that belong to someone else and then look at her like she is crazy when she says they don’t work
Tell her when she loses the next tooth the tooth fairy will give her a key under her pillow… sometimes vanity is beautiful
Sell the cars- I can do without
Tell her that I fibbed about her actual birthdate and she is still only 14.
When she asks to take the car, I will respond, “No hablo ingles”
Paint her bedroom windows black… she’ll sleep for months
Duct tape pool noodles all over the car … for safety… again, sometimes vanity is beautiful
Tell her that there is a warrant for her arrest and going to get her license might land her in jail
Everytime she mentions driving I will scream a B movie horror scream….I’m thinking Pavlov’s Dog, you know.. conditioning will kick in eventually
Have a group of actors storm the house and tell her she won the teen publishers house sweepstakes… she is so rich she can afford a limo with driver
Super glue the car doors shut
Explain the new family tradition where the youngest qualified driver now purchases all gas for all family vehicles as well as washes all cars on Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays and buys dinner on Friday nights…
Everytime she mentions the words drive, I will respond with “Dive? You want to dive?”
Tell her she must learn to drive a stick shift before she can take her driving test
And the one that I know will work for sure…. give her the minivan
Ephesians 6:4
4Fathers, do not exasperate your children; instead, bring them up in the training and instruction of the Lord.
Okay, I’m not going to lie to my daughter… and I will take her this week to get her permit….I don’t want to exasperate her….. but I can stock up on pool noodles and get an enormous bow for the minivan
My lesson series at church for the kids is fairness…. Today focused on favoritism.
In my preparation I was looking on Youtube trying to find a video about fairness … I don’t know how I ended up finding these little treasures because they aren’t for kids nor are they about fairness or favoritism….but they struck me as pretty incredible.
The scene is a prison yard… A choir of seniors are performing songs for their prison audience…
In this first video I was incredibly bothered… watch those in the background… look at their laughter… It doesn’t seem to be a laughter of any kind other than making fun of these silver haired folks…. it really made me uncomfortable and sad to watch them laugh in the manner that they did…
With the feelings I received from the first one, I’m not sure why I decided to watch this second one but something happened to the audience in this one….
The inmates pretty much melted. I was so glad I decided to sit through it..
(Unfortunately embedding of this video is not available from Youtube so to watch the second video you must go here.)
I will have to say…at first I was pretty partial to the older folks… but after watching the video, my attitude towards the prisoners began to soften…
I guess, if I teach it then I should be reminding myself of the Words of God…
Leviticus 19:15
15 ” ‘Do not pervert justice; do not show partiality to the poor or favoritism to the great, but judge your neighbor fairly.
And just who is my neighbor? Seems like it is the prisoners as well as the older folks… I have a very impressive neighborhood!