Texting the Truth - Real Moms, Real Grace
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • BlogLovin
  • Email
Menu
Skip to content
  • Home
  • Our Story
  • Our Team
  • Treasured Products
  • Contact Us

Tag Archives: Jen Moore

Moms in Progress: Jen Moore

7 / 10 / 197 / 14 / 19

Katie

Today in our Moms in Progress series we are excited to feature another one of our blog team members, Jen Moore! To get us started, Jen, can you share with us a recent photo?

Jen

Sure! Here is a picture of me with my twin four-year-old boys.

Katie

Such a sweet picture of you three – all full of laughter and summer sunshine!! ? Jen, have you heard any truth in a podcast, book, or conversation that has been a help to you this week?

Jen

“We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act but a habit.” (Historian Will Durant, commenting on Aristotle) When I read this recently in the book, “The Collapse of Parenting,” by Leonard Sax, it stuck with me.

I don’t know what it is lately, but it seems our boys have upped their toddler game to the next level – most days it feels like they are literally bouncing off the walls? until they collapse into bed at night! Trying to parent with intention and be a model of strong character, myself, requires energy reserves I have to reach way down deep to access most days??.

This quote reminded me that when I take the time to use teachable moments, or instill virtuous attitudes/behaviors (for the first, second, twelfth time), I’m not only making that positive parenting choice a habit, but I’m also increasing the chance that those strong character choices will become habits for my boys, as well?.

Katie

I love that! What a great reminder that my million little, everyday decisions and choices add up to really make a difference – even if it doesn’t seem like it in the moment of 100th repetition with my three year old.? So, what is your hardest parenting struggle currently?

Jen

Now that it’s summer?, the rhythm of our days has changed. While it has been a refreshing change of pace, it’s also presented new challenges in regards to my personal stamina for handling two toddlers all day long?. By late afternoon I start counting down the hours ⏰ until bedtime and a break from the noise, or a chance to sit for five seconds without someone hanging on me.

In response, I’ve been forcing myself to get to bed earlier? (which is hard for me!) so that I can wake up an hour or so before the boys each morning. That quiet time refuels me ⏳, and gives me what I need to get through the day (most days!). Four year olds seem to have an unending supply of energy?!

Katie

I hear you on that! And it’s hard for me to go to bed earlier, too – I need to learn from your self-discipline there! What would you say is going well in your parenting right now?

Jen

One of my most recent personal victories has been the ability to take the boys to church by myself ⛪️. My husband works in the medical field, and his hours constantly vary to include both night/weekend shifts. Our boys are twins, both toddlers now, and O has substantial special needs. Add to that significant sensory processing disorder, with extreme sensory-seeking behaviors, and it can certainly make single parent outings a challenge?. It took me a long time to work up the courage, but when faced with a streak of weekends on my own I decided to go for it – church with the boys, just the three of us.

That first solo mass was a perfect storm? of hair pulling, head hitting, and toddler meltdowns. About halfway through the service, I shuffled all of us to the Women’s restroom with tears in my eyes, little hands yanking out pieces of my hair, and my toddler asking (loud enough for all to hear), “Mommy, why are you crying!”?

If it weren’t for a sweet friend’s family sitting nearby?, we may not have lasted through Communion (and made it to our car in the downpour that greeted us after Mass)?.

Since that day I’ve employed a few new strategies, brought along a few more sensory toys, and asked for a little more help. I am so glad I didn’t give up after that first go-round – that feels like the biggest victory of all✨.

Katie

Way to go, mama! I love that you said you implemented some new strategies, asked for help, and just kept trying. It’s easy to forget that the best things are rarely easy on the first try, but so worth it when we just keep going!

Jen

So true!

Katie

On a lighter note, what is your least favorite household chore? Which one would you pay someone else to do for you?

Jen

Dishes! ? Our dishwasher cleans everything well, but every.single.dish comes out soaking wet. ? I do love getting the dirty dish pile out of my sink and into the dishwasher – but when faced with a full dishwasher to empty and a sink packed with dirty dishes?
Ugh. ?
Give me laundry. I’ll fold that all day.

Katie

Absolutely! Dishes are my nemesis! What is your most embarrassing mom fail?

Jen

Oh, goodness, there are many, but recently I was at my son’s swim lesson and I had his brother there with me.

O was in his wheelchair as I knelt to wrap his brother up in a towel. Just as I went to stand, I felt my head yanked swiftly backward?. I knew immediately that O had me by the hair with not one, but both, hands. We’ve dealt with sensory processing disorder for 3+ years now, and it’s only gotten more severe as he gets older and stronger.

Long story short, I had to pull so hard to free my hair from his little fingers that I toppled completely over onto my bottom in the middle of the floor?. With hair that had been yanked sky-high, I quickly shuffled both boys into the changing area – where C promptly slipped in a wet spot on the floor and wiped completely out (cue toddler waterworks ?).

I reached over to pick him up, and turned back to see ? my blond-haired little guy bouncing freely in his wheelchair through the changing area ♿️. The wheelchair had taken off on me ?!

I lunged forward to grab the handles before his chair could collide with the oncoming wall (though he absolutely loved the bumpy ride), swept his brother into a changing room to settle him down, and eventually got all of us out of there in one piece – but not before O snuck in a couple of head thuds against the changing room wall ? (another favorite sensory-seeking behavior).

Katie

Oh, I can just picture it! You and your sweet boys after swim lessons.?

To finish up here, what is your favorite summer activity to do as a family?

Jen

One of our favorite things to do is get the recommended book lists from the library and work through them together ?. This time of year the boys also love to partake in the library’s Summer Reading Challenge. The boys soak up the time they spend on our laps ?‍?‍? or snuggled up next to us on the couch, and as a former reading teacher I love getting great books in their hands?.

We will also pick a topic, like fishing? – one of C’s favorite activities to do with his Dad right now – and check out every picture book we can find. As simple as it may seem, regular trips to the library have become a family staple.

Katie

We LOVE our library, too! My kids are so motivated to complete their summer reading logs. Thanks for sharing with us today, Jen!

Do you have a story to tell? Would you like to be featured in a future Moms in Progress post?  Just click here and answer a few questions to share the details of your story.  We will do the rest!

Share
  • Pin it
  • Share
  • Tweet
  • Share
  • Email

How to Help Your Child Get to Know the Special Needs Student in Their Classroom

8 / 27 / 188 / 28 / 18

Maybe they’ve just started, or maybe they’re gearing up to begin- either way, the back-to-school season is officially upon us?.

I’ve been on both sides of the desk now – as first a teacher, and now the parent – and when a sweet boy pointed to my son this summer and asked me very genuinely why he couldn’t walk, what surprised me most was that I was completely and utterly unprepared to answer.

What’s the right way to explain something like that to a little one? What’s the “appropriate” response??‍♀️

And here I was, sitting in the most important role of all – Mom!

In relaying that story to other mom friends, it’s consistently apparent that we all want the same thing – to plant seeds of inclusion and love in the hearts of our children??…but we could all use a little direction in doing so.

While listening to a podcast by “Risen Motherhood,” I was recently reminded that not talking about all of the ways God makes us different can also have an unintentional, opposite effect, whereby we inadvertently teach our children that differences are not something we talk about ?. It’s completely natural for our children to be curious about the discrepancies they see in the world around them ?. All they want is to understand, and it’s our job as parents to help them on that journey??.

So… as Mom now to two young boys myself, one typical and one with significantly disabling special needs, here’s what I want you to know:

1.)  I want your child to ask questions. Whether privately to Mom and Dad, or waiting in line at the grocery store for all to hear?? (because isn’t that how it always happens?‍), we want you to have those conversations. We want you to understand the heart of the little boy who sits in the wheelchair. Because, our little guy? He’s sweet, silly, and a serious fighter. ?

It’s easy for all of the qualities that make him so very *special* to be overshadowed by the soft helmet that he sometimes wears, the sensory manipulatives he’s chewing, the bottle he still drinks at almost 4–years-old, the sky-blue glasses that frame his face, the braces supporting his little legs, or the wheelchair that sits beneath him.

It’s ok if your child wants to stare ? as they take it all in. It can be a lot for a little mind to process!? Rest assured, we will not be offended. In fact, quite the opposite. In this politically correct society, I understand wholeheartedly how the fear of saying, or doing, something offensive so often leads us to refrain from engagement altogether. But everyone has a story, and we’d love to share a little more of ours with you.

2.)  Individuals with special needs are not to be ignored or avoided, no matter how “out of it” they may appear to be. That being said, we understand that engagement can sometimes be tricky – especially if the student in your child’s classroom is nonverbal, as my son is. The most important thing I can say here, is that even when an individual is not able to respond much conversationally they might still be able to understand a great deal. Encourage your child to talk to a new friend/classmate with the assumption that he or she understands everything. Whether or not they respond? That may vary – but they will appreciate it, and they just might surprise you.

Whenever we drive in the car?, I make a point of telling each of my boys that I love them. As I get to O, his twin brother emphatically replies, each and every time ?, “He’s not saying it back, Mom!” to which my response is always the same: “That’s ok! I know he’s thinking it.” This is usually met with a resounding, happy “Aaaaahhhhh!” from my little O in the back seat– and that’s response enough for me.

3.)  If there is a student in your child’s classroom with special needs who is able to verbalize without difficulty, encourage your child to engage in friendly conversation with them as they would any other friend. A child with physical disabilities may be feeling self-conscious about their differences?, particularly at the beginning of a new school year. A friendly “Hello” and a smile? might be all that’s needed to break the ice, and help everyone feel more comfortable.

4.)  Encourage your child to ask the teacher how to best relate to their new peer. They might have some tangible advice to offer. For example, my son’s visual impairment only allows him to see 2-4 feet in front of him– something that you would never know just by looking at him.

What are some of his/her interests? O’s twin brother knows that peek-a-boo is one of his very favorite games, so periodically he’ll pick up a blanket so that they can have fun together. Do I expect him to constantly include O in everything he’s doing? Certainly not – they’re two very different little people. But does my heart completely spill over ? when they are able to find those moments of common ground? Absolutely.

5.)  If your child develops a friendship with a new classmate, who also happens to have special needs, don’t shy away from the idea of a play date. Reach out to the child’s parents?. Ask for suggestions as to what might work best for everyone. They will certainly appreciate your thoughtfulness!

6.)  Discuss behaviors that might be troublesome to your child. Head hitting, biting, hair pulling, and yelling out – these are all things that can be very difficult for little ones to process, particularly in the classroom environment. Encourage your child to ask the teacher why a classmate might exhibit such behaviors, and he/she may be able to help them feel more at ease.

For example, my son’s inability to verbalize wants and needs can be very frustrating for him – particularly if we do not understand?. Help your child imagine how that might feel. Sometimes O will bite his arm or yell out when he’s feeling overwhelmed, or excited. Can your child relate to those feelings?

Does the student in your child’s classroom have an adult aide with them during the school day? Why do they think that might be? What can your child do them self, that this new friend might need some extra help accomplishing?

Rather than instilling a sense of sympathy in our children for classmates with special needs, we want to encourage a sense of greater understanding and empathy for another human being – one who, deep down, is a kid just like them.

7.)  It’s a process. Give your child (and yourself!) lots of grace. We don’t want our children to feel it’s their obligation to befriend every individual with special needs who crosses their path. We do want to imprint their little hearts with the notion that God’s fingerprints are on everyone they encounter. Day by day, they can learn a little more about new friends who might initially be harder to understand. Day by day, they’ll learn that differences aren’t so much scary, as they are a reminder that God’s plan for each of us is different.

Last week, my son’s teacher sent home a fabulous list, entitled, “Questions to ask Your Child Beyond ‘How Was Your Day?’” I had admired similar lists when I’d seen them before, and this particular one was adorned with inquiries like, “What made you happy today?” and “What was most challenging?”

So, Mama – here’s my request. When you’re questioning your child about their school day, can I ask you to include just one more? ??

Have you asked them about the special needs student(s) in their classroom??

From one Mama heart to another?, trust me when I say that my child – and yours – will thank you for it.

And this Mama? Well, she certainly thanks you, too.
?Jen

{Please Note: This advice represents the opinion of only one special needs parent, who is still humbly trying to figure things out as she goes. While reference is made to a few of my son’s specific disabilities, it is my hope that all Mamas of special children – of all forms and degrees of disability – might find themselves represented here. }

Soaking in the Truth

Scripture to encourage you:

  • “I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made; your works are wonderful, I know that full well” (Psalm 139:14).
  • “His disciples asked him, ‘Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind? ‘Neither this man nor his parents sinned’, said Jesus, ‘but this happened so that the works of God may be displayed in him’” (John 9: 2-3).
  • “Before I formed you in the womb, I knew you. Before you were born, I sanctified you (Jeremiah 1:5).

Music to inspire you:

  • Different, by Micah Tyler  
  • Fingerprints of God, but Steven Curtis Chapman 
  • You Raise Me Up, by Josh Groban (BYU Vocal Point A Cappella Cover) 

Readings and Resources to come alongside of you:

  • “Risen Motherhood” Podcast – Transcript, Episode 89: Trillia Newbell-Helping Our Kids Celebrate God’s Beautifully Diverse Design 
  • How to Be Friends with a Special Needs Mom: 10 Ways to Encourage and Support 
  • Children’s Books About Empathy

Related Posts on Texting The Truth:

  • What’s Your Challenge?
  • What’s in Your Backpack?
  • Strong Kids

Living Out the Truth

Ideas to try:

  • Here’s an idea that a few of my former colleagues used, and I loved: Read the book Only One You, by Linda Kranz. Go on a hike or a scavenger hunt in the backyard, and find a rock to represent each member of the family. This could also be a fun sleepover or play date activity! Have each child or family member paint their rock with things that they love. Display them in your garden, a vase, or in the classroom as a visual reminder that there is incredible beauty in individuality. 
  • Check out some of these great book suggestions with your kids:  1.) Books about Kids with Special Needs    2.)  Books about Being Different

 

Treasured Products we love:

  • Everybody, Always, by Bob Goff
  • Gigi, God’s Little Princess, by Sheila Walsh
  • Hide ‘Em in Your Heart, by Steve Green
  • The Care and Keeping of YOU, by Valorie Schaefer

{These suggestions are ideas from novice moms. Sometimes our life situations need more.

In that case, seeking out professional help is the right call.}

 

Share
  • Pin it
  • Share
  • Tweet
  • Share
  • Email

Posts navigation

Previous Page 1 2 3 4 Next Page

About Us!

We don’t claim to have motherhood figured out. Actually quite the opposite. We’re a group of women who first and foremost love the Lord and want to honor Him with our lives and talents. And we decided that what better way for us to sort out this beautiful and messy thing called motherhood but to process it together in text messages? Our prayer is that as we share our real-life stories and honest experiences, every mom who visits our blog will receive tangible truth and experience real grace.

Connect with Us!

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • BlogLovin
  • Email

Stay Connected

Enter your email address below to receive notifications of text messages by email!

Categories

  • #atasteoftextingthetruth
  • #autumn2019
  • #beautifulinHistime
  • #bemomstrong
  • #christmas2019
  • #Coronavirus2020
  • #newbeginnings2020
  • #simplechristmas
  • #smallshifts
  • #Spring2020
  • #summer2019
  • #summer2020
  • #thetruthaboutgrowingup
  • #thetruthaboutsummer
  • #warmthinthewinter
  • Anxiety
  • Being Honest
  • Brave Mom
  • Communication
  • Expectations
  • Friendship
  • Holidays
  • Let's Chat
  • Marriage
  • Me Too Moment
  • Mental Health
  • Mom Fails
  • Mom Fears
  • Mom Guilt
  • Mom Identity
  • Mom Life
  • Mom Memories
  • Mom Pride
  • Mom Time
  • Mom Win
  • Moms in Progress
  • Relationships
  • School
  • Special Needs
  • Tired Mom
  • Uncategorized
  • Working Mom

Search this Site



Tags

anger Anna Brink Anxiety balance Christmas comparison coronavirus discipline Easter faith Fear Forgiveness friendship God grace grief Humility husband identity Janelle Gibbs Jen Moore Jesus Jo Perkins juggling Katie Duh Laura Freytag marriage memories Michelle Warner Mistakes Mom Fail mom guilt Moms in Progress mom win Mom Win Wednesday perfectionism perspective prayer resentment rest Social Media summer surrender trust Virginia Forste

Recent Posts

  • “Mom-sters” Hungry for Peace and Laughter
  • Dream Big, Hope for More, and Don’t Settle
  • Leaving a Legacy
  • Thieves of Joy
  • Reflections on a Blog’s 4th Birthday

Share the Love ♥

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • BlogLovin
  • Email

About

Submissions

Contact Us

Disclosure

Advertising

We Believe

Site made with ♥ by Kristen McCall
Angie Makes Feminine WordPress Themes