Mike Berry realized he was absent from the front lines of parenthood. Here’s how he changed it.
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A while back I was watching a movie that depicted a battle sequence. To be honest, I really can’t remember if it was a scene where a war plane was about to attack, or soldiers were marching toward a battle. But I remember at one point in the film, someone screaming the line “Engage, engage!” In other words, Get into the fight.
I’m not sure if this is actual military lingo or not, and I’m fairly certain that, this is a statement that has been uttered a time or two in the middle of an intense battle. Those words have stayed with me ever since I heard them a couple of years ago. The imagery of engaging in a worthy battle and soldiers choosing to run toward the fight, instead of from it, is powerful.
Do you realize that, as moms and dads, and husbands and wives, we are in a great fight? In fact, it’s the greatest fight we will ever be in. It’s the fight for our families, our children, our spouses, our future!
It’s a fight that I have been well aware of for the past 16 years, but so easily finding myself disengaging from time and time again. I admit that openly.
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It’s a fight that I have been well aware of for the past 16 years, but so easily finding myself disengaging from time and time again. I admit that openly.
I write this post because, I had a defining moment recently. About a month ago I realized that nearly every day, during a work-week, I would come home from being engaged in some great battles, or immersed in life-changing conversations with people I barely knew, and almost immediately disengage from the fight for my family.
Instead I would fight against them, or with them, or worse—remove myself from the battle altogether. My iPhone would stay on, emails would continue to get checked and responded to, texts would continue to be sent, my children’s voices would become white noise, the help my wife needed would get ignored, and frankly, I would just disengage. There were times I’d even find myself leaving the room to do … nothing.
I chalked it up to being tired, worn out, drained from a long day, “fried intellectually” and more. I was complacent until I came to my senses. It hit my like a brick wall. I’m not sure when exactly, but I remember coming back to that scene from the epic war movie. The words, “Engage, engage!” echoed in my mind.
The war for your family’s heart is a battle far greater than anything in this world.
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Get into the fight! Engage in the battle! Fight for something worthy! The war for your family’s heart is a battle far greater than anything in this world. The moment I stepped into my front door at the end of the day, was the moment I was needed the most.
I began to ask myself some tough questions:
- Am I using all of my energy on events or people outside of my family so much so that I have nothing left to give when I get home?
- Would I walk away from a co-worker or a congregant in need the same way I drift out of the room at home when my wife and children have gone an entire day without seeing me?
- If at an important meeting during the work day would I continue to text or answer emails or log onto Facebook or Twitter instead of engaging with the people around the table the same way I do with the people in my family when I arrive home?
The answers I came up with haunted me. I realized I was disengaging to a degree that was dangerous. I needed to change. I needed to set up healthier boundaries.
We all need defining moments like this, don’t we? We all need moments where we come to our senses and make a necessary change before it’s too late. I am sure many of you would agree.
My question is, as a fellow spouse and parent: What change do you need to make? Are you finding yourself disengaging from the greatest battle? Are you placing all of your time, energy, and effort into other people to a degree that you have nothing left to give to your family?
Maybe you need to ask yourself the same questions that I asked myself a few weeks ago? Frankly, this is work in progress for me. I haven’t arrived and I am sure that you haven’t either. But, let me echo these words- “Engage, engage!”
Get into the fight. You will be glad you did!
Photo—RebeccaVC1/Flickr