Being a parent is tough.
Especially when you watch your children make choices that are contrary
to what you taught them. These
experiences can really take a toll on a marriage. There are feelings of hurt, maybe shame,
guilt, responsibility, disappointment, etc.
It is hard to remember that it is your child that is bringing these
feelings out, and not to project these feelings onto your spouse. Adam and Eve faced the situation of a
challenging child – one that killed another one of their children. I can’t imagine the thoughts and feelings and
blame that might have been going through their minds. There was no one else to blame, no one else
to turn to, except each other. In Covenant
Hearts, Elder Bruce C. Hafen stated:
“We do know that because they accepted
the Atonement of Christ, Adam and Eve . . . could all grow from their
experience without suffering irreparable damage. With their family life as their main place of
spiritual schooling, they learned from both misery and joy, discovering
firsthand that “God . . . shall consecrate thing afflictions for thy gain” (2
Nephi 2:2)”.
Pondering on Elder Hafen’s comments, and the experience of
Adam and Eve, I have a greater appreciation for the Atonement. I know that I need to do my best, putting my
whole heart and soul into being a righteous mother. But I am in partnership with God, who loves
my child as much, if not more so, than I do.
And he has provided a way for both of us to learn from these
experiences, without “suffering irreparable damage”. We are able to come together as husband and
wife, and do our best, and learn from these experiences so that we will have a
greater appreciation of our Father in Heaven, and His thoughts and feelings
toward each one of us. I am sure, just
as much as I sometimes feel like I am beating my head against the wall because
of one of my children and their choices, He is up there doing the same thing
with the choices I make and the things I do.
But He loves me in spite of my mistakes.
He keeps encouraging me and lovingly guiding me along. He has provided opportunities for me to learn
and grow for a reason. I need to trust
that He knows me and my husband, what we can handle, what we need to still
learn, and how we can best learn it. I
need to trust that my husband and I can work through these adversities because
we can help each other best, in the ways that we need it most, so we can be who
Heavenly Father needs us to be. Our
loyalty and trust in each other, and with God, will help us be stronger than we
could be on our own.