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Book Review: Love No Matter What by Brenda Garrison

Love No Matter What

“Love No Matter What” by Brenda Garrison is a book that talks about loving your children regardless of the decisions they make in life and whether or not you agree with those decisions.

The book comes from Garrison’s own struggles with her daughter Katie who also contributes to the book.  She talks about various social problems from her own daughter wanting to move out before they thought she was ready to kids who have drug and alcohol problems.

I think there is some good advice in the book, however, I feel there is to much suggestion to be passive.  One example was when Katie told her parents she was going to move out.  She asked for her college money that her parents had saved in order to pay her living expenses.  The reason given in the book to give her the money was “It was time for Katie to learn some hard lessons and for us to let her go – college money included.”  In Garrison’s own words she says they could have withheld the money but it would have been a moot point.  It may have been a waste of time to argue the point but as a parent I am not going to fund something I think is wrong for my child.  While I may not be able to stop them from doing things I disagree with once they are older I sure don’t have to finance it.

Children grow up and make mistakes but the way the examples in this book say to handle them suggests that we should just watch them fall in order to save the relationship with our children.  I think this is a broad statement to make as every parent’s relationship with their child is going to be different than the next and to infer that providing your guidance and advice might harm the relationship so we should sit on the sidelines and watch I think is a wrong suggestion.  Yes, sometimes you have to let your kids fail in order for them to learn but that doesn’t mean you don’t offer the advice or just agree to allow them to do something just to avoid conflict.

While my biggest critique is a large one I feel that some valid points are woven throughout the book.  “It is what it is” is a great message for parents to relieve guilt they may feel when their child has done something they feel like they taught better.  The book drives home the message that our children will grow up and are not copies of ourselves so we cannot expect them to do things like us and when they do something we don’t agree with it isn’t necessarily because we didn’t do something right as a parent.  Children grow up and have personalities of their own and no matter how close to perfect (can you get close to parenting perfectly?) you can parent you cannot change that fact.

If you would like to get other peoples point of view or purchase the book you can do so on Amazon.

*Note: I received a copy of this book at no charge in exchange for my honest review.*

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Make the Call

Last Call

Photo Courtesy of eefeewahfah

You have to decide. Right now you must make the decision to decide. Decide what exactly? Well, what decision have you been putting off?

Everyone has to make choices and decisions. The important point is actually making them. We have all put a decision off and then proceed to make excuses as to why we can’t make a choice right now. The longer you put off a decision the harder it becomes to make — you must make the call.

Dan Miller suggests giving yourself a timeline. Give yourself a few days on the important decisions, consult those you need to get input from, and you make the call. You put a date on the decision and when the day comes you make it – no excuses.

Or you can try the Dave Ramsey way. Think about the worst possible outcome that your decision can have. Can you live with it? If so, then go. Many times the worst case scenario is not as bad as we imagined it once we actually think about it.

We all have hard decisions to make from time to time. The important thing is to make them.

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Indecision

IndecisionHave you ever had a hard time making a decision?  Has the delay in making one cost you something (time, money, job promotion, etc)?  In my job I have seen it cost all of these things to people and it was simply because they could not make up their mind.

Indecision can effect you and your loved ones, cost you opportunities in your home and work life, and keep your mind occupied so you cannot focus on tasks.  No matter whether your need to make a career decision or what to eat for dinner a delay can cost you.

Dan Miller in his book “48 Days to the Work You Love” says that he and his wife limit themselves to a two week window to make any kind of decision.  To help make their decisions they have a 5 step process:

  1. State the problem.
  2. Get the advice and opinions of others.
  3. List the alternatives.
  4. Choose the best alternative.
  5. Act.

And just like your third grade teacher telling you during those standardized tests that if you don’t know the answer 100% to take the first one that came to your mind, that can be good advice here.  In many instances your first thought of the right answer is going to be what is good for you.  Don’t make your decision based on your first assumption but look at that as a really good starting point and work from there.

Being able to make a decision is just as important as having goals and dreams.  If you have a dream and cannot decide whether or not to act upon it then where does that leave you?

Photo courtesy of spaceamoeba.