Saturday, May 23, 2009

Videos

We left our camera in San Antonio last weekend, but we'll be back next weekend. Until then you'll have to make due with these videos.






Hope everyone has a good Memorial Day weekend. Go see a movie, there's actually lots of good stuff out!

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Before and After

This is the paper I turned in for my Intro to Women's Studies Class, which I refer to as my Feminist Studies Class. The professor asked us to choose a topic or event somehow pertaining to our class and discuss how we thought of it prior to the class and how we see it now. It was a terrible, terrible class in so many ways. When we discussed marriage in class she praised marriages that divide everything evenly down the middle, housework, childcare, paid labor, etc. When I asked about complimentarianism she dimply dismissed it as being too good to be true. What a poor education that a student isn't even exposed to the other side.


Prior to this class I thought I had a good marriage and a good spouse (he married me after all.) Friends for six and a half years, married for nearly four, Tommy and I are best friends. We are fortunate to both come from families in which our parents are still married. Tommy and I also share similar, if not identical, views on politics, theology, economics, childrearing, and gender relations.
As it turns outs, our view on marriage, and our marriage itself, is so extraordinary that feminists don’t even believe one like it can even exist. When asked about this form of relationship, most feminists will simply dismiss the idea thinking it is impossible, such a marriage could never exist, and it’s not even worth entertaining, let alone studying. This position is blown-off as closed-minded and outdated.
What is this view one might ask? Don’t tell the feminists, but it’s called the complementarian position. In summary, this position says that men and women are different in their roles and abilities but equal in their value. This position is supported by conservative Christianity. My religion deeply impacts my worldview and I cannot disregard those beliefs in a discussion of womanhood nor do I feel the need to.
Before this class, my husband and I both placed a high value on women’s work. The laundry, dishes, sweeping, meal production, childcare and so forth are all jobs typically done by me. It can be a blow to my pride that I don’t get a bonus for a good job ironing. The only raise I get is to put my feet up at the end of the day. Even if I toot my own horn, no one is going to advance me into management. I don’t take a check to the bank every other Friday (though who does with direct deposit?) But I am paid in a different currency. Tommy loves laundry day, having his pick of clean boxers; he’s practically giddy when he slides into the clean sheets. He never forgets to thank me. I pay myself by spending less in a month on groceries than what most spend in a week. I get the joy of knowing where my son’s ticklish spots are and how sweet it is to have him fall asleep on my chest. I now see these as invaluable opportunities. They are not in the shadow of what my husband does, but a reflection of what he does.
We also place a high value on my husband’s work both as a master’s student and as a paid employee. Thanks to feminism I have a new appreciation for how family focused Tommy is. Tommy chooses to remain in a job that allows him flexible scheduling so he can watch our son occasionally and still get in his hours. He could be making twice as much (be still my heart) if he did the same thing for another employer. I now realize how much I took for granted his family friendly workplace whenever we took lunch and hung out on a whim, or whenever I asked him to come home early, just because.
Our views of complementarity come from the Bible. But what about patriarchy, doesn’t the Bible promote oppression of women? Before learning about feminism I didn’t realize how poorly understood patriarchal societies and women’s status within them were. In patriarchy, men carry the responsibility, and the ultimate decision making ability. These men (ideally intelligent like my husband) know to consult their equally intelligent spouse prior to taking any action that would affect the family. In the Bible one can see that even Adam was held responsible for Eve’s sin of eating from the tree. Women aren’t to be commandeered because they are weak and irrational, but protected because they are valuable.
A feminist might say that religion exists to control women’s sexuality because it was a threat to early civilization; they believe early laws will reflect this. Yes, some of the laws in the Bible are in effort to instruct women in the purpose of sexuality. Some of them are in effort to instruct men. All of the laws recorded in the Bible were written because God expects his people to be holy; yes he expects even a woman's sexuality to be holy. Many of the laws are followed with consequences such as stone the man who rapes a woman. Yet it is men in the book of Proverbs (which incidentally personifies wisdom as a woman) who are instructed to control their springs, warning him to never share his springs with strangers. Because my husband has heeded these instructions, his fountain has been blessed and he rejoices in the wife of his youth. (Prov. 5:18)
Being a wife and a mom is not simple. I benefit from support and encouragement. For all of feminism’s claims of liberation and enlightenment, there is no support found here for me. Freedom from childbearing? Liberation from the home? Sounds like bondage to loneliness and futility to me. And Betty- it’s not the vacuum sucking the life out of you, it’s all the time you’ve spent stirring up dissention.

I received a 9 out of 10 for this essay. Her comment at the end was to say that she didn't really agree, but thought it was well written. What do you think?

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Recommendation

Can I just recommend that you take a few minutes right now, and peruse a website?



I haven't gotten to read everything that I'd like there, but wow! There is so much good stuff.

Christian Hospitality

Summary of Complimentarian Position

The Danvers Statement


Biblical Foundations for Manhood and Womanhood
- the book by Wayne Grudem

This is an excellent resource. Find any gems there? Let me know.

Monday, May 4, 2009

Month by Month: May

I thought I maybe try and post our "goals" for the month as a new feature. And also let you know how the previous month went.
April was our first month to try the envelope system. I've gotta say, I really liked it, thought it was kinda liberating. We got buy with $200 for groceries without much of a problem. Eating out was a little more tricky, but fortunately we found a little wiggle room.

Reading
Tommy and I decided to each pick three books to read this summer. I know many of you read three books a week, and hopefully we'll read more than that, but I thought three was a reasonable place to start. I'm not sure what his three are, but mine are:
Shepherding a Child's Heart
Love Your God with all Your Mind

Where's Mom
Because I'm half way through with one of these, and one is less than 50 pages, I've decided to read the Twilight Series as well, 2560 pages according to Amazon.

Financial
Holidays, birthdays and special occasions are always tricky on the pocket book. Especially when you live away from family. We have to either find extra money for gas to drive down, or for postage to ship something. This month my sister-in-law is getting married, so we will be down twice, once for the shower and once for the wedding. Fortunately school will be finished so Tommy will be working more and I won't be driving 150 miles to and from school a week; I suppose it will all come out in the wash. We might have to impose a "no eating on the road" rule to help things out!

What are you reading? What do you do for family that lives out of town? Or family that lives in town?

And for those of you only interested in the baby:



He liked my chocolate popsicle













His first tooth. He's modest about it, doesn't want to show it off.

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