Guns in the Home

Here is a recent discussion in our home...

I grew up in a rural part of the country and hunting and guns where just an everyday part of my life growing up. 

All my friends had hunting rifles and shotguns as well as their dads and brothers.  Early on in my life, I learned about gun safety and took a hunters safety course.  My wife however, never had guns in the house and her dad was not a hunter. 

So, since we have had children, we have not had guns in the house.  This is about to change though.  I recently wanted to start shooting again for practice and sport.  This caused a major discussion between my wife and I over the safety of having guns in the house with children. 

P2000skThe first points I addressed were this:

Guns are always stored in a locked case
The key to the case is in a separate location
The ammunition is then stored in a 3rd location

I also plan on teaching my children about the gun.  Both my children have been exposed to BB Guns and have fired them at Boy Scouts or with me at one time or the other. 

However, with a more powerful firearm, I plan on teaching them to never touch a gun unless a parent is supervising. I also plan on showing them the functions of the weapon, how to place it on safe and how to check if the gun is loaded, etc. 

I will also explain the purpose of the gun:  To practice shooting on a range at targets.  Not to point at people or shoot bad guys or whatever ideas children may have. 

SafetyThis is my thought process on this, I grew up around guns and handled them often.  Guns were not an excitement too me as a child or teen because they were always present and I was taught to respect what they can do and their purpose.   

The studies I have read said that many children are often excited by guns because it is something foreign to them, therefore they "sneek" them when parents are not looking. 

I plan on teaching respect and familiarization as well as when and where a gun is used.  This is new terroritory for our family so it will be interesting to see the process. 

If anyone out there has any experience either good or bad with weapons in the home, I would love to hear them. 

Developing Your Bucket List: Part 5

Okay, continuing are discussion on developing your own bucket list. 

Everyone has goals, maybe not written down but at least somewhere in their mind they have some dreams and goals. 

The problem is not coming up with goals, it is making your dreams and goals a priority and then taking action to reach them. 

I have another exercise  or if you have grown lazy at this point, simply do this mentally. 

Make a time event chart from the time you wake up in the morning until the time you go to bed at night and list your daily activities. 

Example:

0520 - Wake Up
0600-0700  - Workout
0700-0730 - Read the Bible
0730 -0830 - Breakfast, Shower
0830 - 1130 - Work
1130-1300 - Lunch
1300-1700 - Work
1700 -1800 - Check email, stocks.
1800-1830 - Dinner
1830 - 2000 - Family Time and Kids Homework
2000 - 2100 - Computer Work (French and Legacy Dad)
2100-2200 - Time with Wife
2200 - UTC - Read, TV, Computer Time
23/2400 - 0520 - Sleep 

Based on this time frame, where am I working on goals? 

I would also look at your weekend activities and see where the majority of your free time goes.  This will give you a better idea of where your time and energy are going. 

Hold on, taking action is next...

The New Eve

There is a lot of great books and courses out there now for men wanting to raise the bar in their marriage, family and spiritual life. 

However, when searching for content for women or our daughters, this is a seemingly harder task. 

Recently though, I found Robert Lewis's new book:  The New EveTheneweve_lg

Robert Lewis has some of the best Men's Studies out there including Raising A Modern Day Knight and Men's Fraternity.  However, for a man to write about womens issues always raises a red flag for me.   Yet, I see that author Shaunti Feldhahn  (Author of For Women Only)  has not only endorsed this book but said this: 

"I never thought a book written by a man could give me such an eye-opening picture of who I should be as a woman."

This made me take a second look. 

The New Eve sets forth and elaborates upon five "Bold Moves" for today's discerning woman:

  Live from the Inside Out
Adopt a Biblical Definition of Womanhood
Embrace a Big Picture Perspective on Life
Live with the End in Mind
Use Wisdom with a Man

You can also go and watch the trailer video here

Majoring in the Minors

Something a mentor told me many years ago now when I was a young, arrogant guy was  "Lance, stop majoring in the minors." 

Today, this man retired in his early 40's and spends his time speaking and finding new investments. 

What he meant was don't put so much time into areas that will yield minimal results.  Ecb6520a9a22426bacaca59c3c98e157

These things could be:

TV
Sports
A Slowlane Job
Mindless hobbies

Most people spend a majority of their lives and time working endlessly in areas that will yield minimal results.  I guess this is okay if your plan is for mediocrity?

For instance, Dr. Thomas Stanley's study on the country's wealthiest people revealed that the top traits of high income earners was:

Honesty, Vision, Risk Taking, and People Skills

How many college courses have we taken on these areas? 

I would also list these as the top areas that pay huge dividends:

Faith
Marriage
Parenting
Self Development
Finances - Investing

How much time to we put toward these areas? Hum....

It's funny that these areas are the ones that usually can cause the biggest pain or greatest pleasure in our lives yet we focus so little time on learning and developing these areas? 

Now does this mean become some all work no play type of person, no.  I just think we need to seriously look at where we spend a majority of our time. 

The next step for our Developing Your Bucket List project is to see where we spend our time, if you do the exercise, the results will not only amaze you, but sicken you as well.

What Women Really Want: Part I

I hope everyone is following through on the Developing Your Bucket List posts?  I will address this more later this week. 

Today I want to talk about women, those strange creatures that vex us, trap us and then end up living with us for years and years. 

I thought I knew women after studying and studying and trying to figure them out but I am finding everyday they are still a mystery to me. 

So, I read all the marriage books (so you don't have to) and try to give the cliff notes version here on Legacy Dad.  Recently I have been listening to the Audiobook of
For Men Only and have learned some pretty profound stuff, read on...

Cuban_cigar_womenEpiphany #1  - Women Need A Popup Blocker

Womens emotions are like popup windows on a computer, they can popup at any time.  It could be an old memory, a fight from three weeks ago or just something she forgot to do and all of a sudden BLAM! that emotion has popped up and now she is feeling that emotion with the same intensity as when she first experienced it.  The worst part is, they don't have a popup blocker.  So she might have some unresolved conflict with us from back when Stone Temple Pilots were on tour come popping up and all of a sudden she is angry or sad or frustrated and it doesn't go away until she resolves it. 

You see, God gave us men the blessing of emotional procrastination and prioritization.  We can simply put off emotions until we have time to process them later or days/weeks from now.  Women cannot. 

Just the basic knowledge of this has helped me in the past week.  I now understand that when my wife is feeling a certain way, it could be from something days or weeks ago and the best thing I can do is talk to her and listen. 

Remember, don't be Mr. Fixit, just listen and help her to come to her own resolution. 

Epiphany #2  - Bust Your Butt In The Right Areas

Fill Her Emotional Love Tank?

This one caught me by surprise although my wife has been trying to tell me this for awhile.   
Emtionaltank_2

According to the surveys done in the book:      

Women prefer emotional security over financial security. 

Now does this mean we can chuck our jobs and sit on the couch?  Of course not.  Women do of course expect a level of financial security. But in most womens priority list, spending more time with her and the family is more important than a bigger house, nicer cars and a fully stocked 401k. 

For men however, we feel secure when there is money in the bank and often feel a pull to be the best provider possible which we often translate as more financial security.

For women however, security means feeling close, connected and being around in the relationship. 

In a survey, 7 out of 10 married women said they would prefer financial struggles over distance in the relationship. 

To further unpack this:  Women prefer their husbands to be around more rather than having more money.  They would choose their husbands happiness over having more things, vacations, financial abundance.

Mr. Provider - 75% of men are always conscious of their burden to provide for the family and most of us like it this way. 

For men, what we do, in a lot of ways defines us. 

We think longer hours at work = more money = more love? 

Women however see this:

longer hours at work = work is your main priority = you care more about your work than the family.

Okay, so here is what they really want from us:

1. She feels the two of you are close
2. She sees that you make time together a priority
3. She sees your commitment to her
4. She sees your active in the life of the home
5. She sees you making an effort to provide as long as that isn't in the way of 1-4.

For women, it is more about the effort you put into the relationship that matters.  She measures your commitment based on your level of effort, not based on the results. 

This is hard for men because me like to measure things in dollars, cents, yards, and touchdowns.  Measuring emotions is measured how?   Beats me?

Finally, women want us to be happy.

The survey pointed out that 70% women would not only want us to take a job that allowed us more time with the family but also a job that allowed us more time for us to follow our dreams.

Women DO NOT like to see their men go to a job they hate just for the fact of finances.  She would much rather have a less stressed husband, making less money but spending his free time with the family and following his true callings.

Huh? 

The survey also pointed out that women would not want their husbands to take a lower paying job to spend more time with the family but then ultimately feel unfulfilled?

So whats the bottom line? 

Spend more time with the family and less time in the office. 
Also use your free time to follow your true dreams and callings
Financial Security does not mean marital security. 

Until next time.

 
   
 
 

Happy Valentines Day

LebaiserdelhoteldevilleparisI don't know where I would be without the love and support of my wife.  I've done some pretty wild and stupid things over the years and she has always been there to stand by me and support me. 

I drag her all over the world with our two children and she never complains, she just enjoys the adventure and makes the best of every situation.

Ros24sweetexp_rby07_2_l

So today I want to say thank you for all my wife has done and for helping me grow as a person and man.   She truly gives me the strength and inspiration to get up day in and day out and continue the fight. 

Thank you for your unconditional love, support and most of all for believing in me and standing by me no matter what road less traveled I take you down.  I'm the man I am today because of you.

Your Husband,

Lance