Category Archives: Parenting
Why Liam Neeson Should Make a “Taken 3”
It’s not because the acting, dialogue, or script were astounding. Because none of them were.
It’s not because the film fills a gap in our need for vigilantes to do what we feel we can’t to make a difference in the world. Because if films like that make us feel better, they can also make us feel complacent, and maybe a little blood thirsty. These movies do end up being a little “torture porn the family can enjoy” in some scenes.
It’s not because if there’s a sequel there also has to be a trilogy.
There’s only one reason there needs to be a Taken 3, and the reason is because it should go like this:
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A Year of Being a Father
I’ve been a father for over a year now. Already my son has taken 15 steps and can make approximately 5 animals sounds. Every day it seems I discover new things to love about him.
The first time I held that boy I felt a tremendous love and a tremendous responsibility. I had to hold him while his mother recovered, and he slept in my arms, not knowing who I was or even seeing me yet. But he felt warmness and a heartbeat and something protective around him. I didn’t know anything about him other than his name, and that he was the most beautiful thing I had ever seen.
The first few weeks were boring, but sweet. He mostly slept, ate, and looked at our blurry faces. I held him on my chest at night while my wife tried to get some rest.
Then came each of the little milestones: The first smile, the first laugh, the first deliberately spoken syllable, the first crawling, the first step, the first word—
His first word, we’ve agreed, was “hi”. He waves now, says “hi” and “bye”. He’s such a chatty, friendly boy. He holds phones up to his head and says “hi”. He can say “no”, and points his finger. He says “Dada”, “Mama”, and blows kisses by putting his hand to his mouth and moaning into his waving fingers.
My boy loves bubbles, bath time, and doggies, but is afraid of laughing monkeys. Ask him how big he is and he will raise his arms up in the air. Ask him how much Grandma loves him and he’ll do the same.
A couple weeks ago I had to stay home with my boy because he had a fever. He played all day, took naps, went for a walk, and watched Lorax. He ate a whole pouch of organic baby food. And pooped. When his mother came home, I was lying on the floor, exhausted. Toys were strewn all about the floor. My one-year-old son crawled over to me, laughed maniacally as he slapped my back like a bongo drum, and then rested his head on me and sighed. “Ahhhhh”.
This is my boy. And I am his daddy. Every day is a gift. I don’t have any insight or wisdom to give today. All I have is show-and-tell. I am so happy to be blessed with fatherhood, and to have such a happy boy. I hope the same for all those who wish for it. I ask for your prayers that I will be a good father all my days. I also ask for your prayers for children who do not have fathers, and for men who want to have children but cannot. Adults, men and women, try to be a strong presence in the lives of others always, especially those whose parents are not, or could not be there. There, that’s the wisdom/insight/moral instruction part of my post.
The other day I had a special Father’s Celebration breakfast with him at his daycare. It was the first time I ever saw him eat an entire meal without throwing something off the table or getting upset. He’s such a good boy.
These may just be the best years.
Happy Father’s Day to me!
_Parenting with Love and Logic_: A Book Review
This may not be the first time you’ve heard about the “Love and Logic” method of parenting. As a parent of a one-year-old son who read to be prepared for having a child, I decided to begin the next step by reading ways of being the parent of a child who will eventually be capable of listening to the reasoning of parents.
Parenting with Love and Logic by Foster Cline and Jim Fay is an introduction to a style of parenting that is is meant to reflect the balance of—you guessed it—love and logic, its foundation being the teachings of Christianity, most notably the proverbs of Solomon. Like many things I admire, their philosophy relies on a concept of balance.

An Open Letter to Moms from Kid President
This one goes out to all the moms.
“Does the Pro-Life Movement Need a New Strategy?”
“Does the Pro-Life Movement Need a New Strategy?”
Donald Miller on the pro-life movement and how it can be more effective, more authentic, more Christ-like.
What Teachers Really Want to Tell Parents
Why Are Kids Leaving Church?
Why are kids leaving church? This post suggests some very real possibilities that parents need to consider.
_Blue Like Jazz_: the Book, the Film, the Thoughts
“I used to not like God because God didn’t resolve. But that was before any of this happened…Jazz is like life because it doesn’t resolve. But what if we’re not alone? What if all these stars are notes on a page of music swirling in the blue like jazz?”
I came across Donald Miller as a group at my church were studying his memoir, and then as my brother introduced me to him. Donald Miller’s memoir of reflective essays, Blue Like Jazz: Non-Religious Thoughts on Christian Spirituality, is a book that is refreshingly honest, complexly painful, and creatively provocative. It successfully reaches both Christians and non-Christians as an audience.
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_Fireproof_ Your Marriage—Movie Review (and Soap Box)
This is how I saw them coming up with the title: Somewhere in rural Georgia director Alex Kendrick heard a preacher say, “Folks, you need to affair-proof your marriage.” He misheard the preacher, and thus an idea was born.
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