If
you are a father or if you know of a mother who is without a spouse, one of the kindest things you can do is to
help her children celebrate her day. It's so good for kids to
understand that not everything is about them and to experience the
incomparable joy of making someone else happy. In the process of
preparing something special for their mother children learn how to put
themselves in her place and create something that speaks to her desires.
The following article from the Christian Science Monitor
addresses the different languages that express love -- from a new hedge
trimmer to a walk in the park. For a mother who might not expect a
celebration of some sort it will be an even greater joy.
What Mother's Day language do you speak?
BERKELEY, CALIF.
I
know there are some women who would be very unhappy if they received a
new hedge trimmer for Mother's Day or some other special event. I am not
one of those women. I would instead be upset to receive an expensive
bouquet of roses. But I realize there are women who feel exactly the
opposite.
Understanding
these differences has a big effect on relationships, understanding that
there are many different languages of love.
I
like to bake, but my husband, who is not fond of sweets, would not
hear, "I care about you," in a batch of freshly baked cookies. He might
appreciate the thought, but he would be much happier to get me out of
the kitchen and off to a hike in the mountains.
We
can learn to hear "I care about you" in someone's gesture, even if it
is not in "our language." Over the years we learn that each person has a
unique way that they express affection and love, and each person has a
unique set of gestures they perceive as loving. Understanding on both
sides makes it work.
At
first, I didn't hear "I care for you," when my husband washed my car.
Originally I thought, "I can just run it through the car wash." But then
I realized that it was important to let my husband speak his language
of love to me and equally important that I read it that way.
Gifts
and gestures that express caring vary so broadly. One friend shared
that her preferred combination of loving gifts and gestures was as
follows: any high-tech add-on to her computer and someone to follow her
toddler around and pick up all the clutter.
My
own objection to expensive bouquets is not to flowers. I love flowers,
but I am a gardener and an annoyingly practical person. I would rather
have a plant for the yard. Once in a while, I do appreciate the gift of a
certain perfume, but wonderful gardening tools are my real luxury. And
even more wonderful - someone to follow me around and pick up the
clippings as I prune.
As
a mother, I have found wish lists a good way to help with translating
these unique languages we have. My Mother's Day wish list always
includes the request that the sometimes-unsweet siblings will be sweet
to each other.
The
first wish list included what I wanted for dinner. From that wish list,
my family developed a traditional Mother's Day menu to speak my
language. And just as important - though I do not like breakfast in bed -
I "oohed" and "aahed" when my children were little and graced me with
this honor. Breakfast in bed is not, in my language, a loving gesture,
but it was in theirs and so it was important to "hear" and understand
their language.
This comprehension of others' emotions even when not perfectly expressed is maybe the most loving language of all.
To
this day, I remember the way that my father raved about the weird
little salads that 5-year-old me served him on jar lids. One of his
"favorites" was crumbled up saltines on shredded carrots! I love that he
understood my language. His language was the understanding.
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