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Jennifer and Her Three Children


I have four children. The three girls are 5 1/2, 4, and 2 1/2. My son is 11 months. We live in the suburbs, we have no sidewalks, and there is a very busy street behind our house.

We spend our time talking, playing, taking walks, planting gardens, going to the park, reading books, coloring...so many things. We decorated straw hats one evening. As the baby gets older, I am looking forward to being able to spend time teaching the girls to bake and doing crafts. The kids are never occupied with television, so they always run and greet their daddy when he walks in from work. He is their favorite toy.

We don't have millions of toys. They are quite creative. They can turn a doily into a doll blanket. They play house, church, visiting...so many things they come up with. They sit quietly with each other and look at books. They are very observant and notice very tiny things. A slug, a ladybug, the spider crawling down the wall... They don't need constant entertainment because they haven't been trained to have short attention spans.

I so rarely hear from them that they are bored. Living in the Pacific Northwest means a lot of rainy days. Some children would mope in front of the television, but my girls see rain as a golden opportunity to play in the water. They would rather play outside on a rainy day.

My kids have very simple tastes. They aren't seeing every toy from commercials and dying if they don't get them all. As a matter of fact, I don't think they know of any toys out there that are popular beyond Barbie dolls. They aren't spending a lot of time coveting.

By not spending our time in front of a television, we are able to see where our kids are needing boosts in character development. We hope to raise good, godly young people. That means we cannot allow anyone else to raise them, Hollywood included.

Granted, getting free time is difficult. But, there are many days I can sit and do my e-mail while I listen to them playing happily in the other room. They still take naps, and that is a great time for a little break.

I grew up on television. There are things I should never have seen. The glimpses of television I get now make me doubly sure that the kids don't need to be exposed to it because the stuff is worse now than when I was small.

We want our kids to know that we have a fine family. They can only know that if we are actively engaged with them. Television is the great disengager. We want our children to have a safe place when they get home from school. They can't have that if the TV is on. There are things on television that are too disturbing to allow us to make a safe place. We have such a few number of years with them. Why waste them?

Jennifer

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