We all have kids and many times can find it hard to explain life lessons. I think this is a wonderful story to share with our kids.
Pounding In and Pulling Out Nails
When I confronted my daughter after she hurt another child with a mean comment, she cried and immediately wanted to apologize. That was a good thing, but I wanted her to know an apology can’t always make things better.
I told her the parable of Will, a 9-year-old whose father abandoned his mom two years earlier. Will was angry, and he often lashed out at others with hurtful words. He once told his mom, “I see why Dad left you!”
Unable to cope with his cruel outbursts, she sent him to his grandparents for the summer. His grandfather’s strategy to help Will learn self-control was to make him go into the garage and pound a two-inch-long nail into a four-by-four board every time he said a mean thing.
For a small boy, this was a major task, and he couldn’t return until the nail was all the way in. After about ten trips to the garage, Will began to be more cautious about his words. Eventually, he even apologized for all the bad things he’d said.
That’s when his grandmother stepped in. She told him to bring in the board filled with nails and instructed him to pull them all out. This was even harder than pounding them in, but after a huge struggle, he did it.
His grandmother hugged him and said, “I appreciate your apology, and of course I forgive you because I love you, but I want you to know an apology is like pulling out one of these nails. Look at the board. The holes are still there. The board will never be the same. Your dad put a hole in you, Will, but please don’t put holes in other people. You’re better than that.”
Michael Josephson
www.charactercounts.org
This Saturday we had another wonderful dance performance. My two dancers did a wonderful job and they looked great! Morgan was able to wear two costumes that have definitely gotten used, one of them is starting to have the straps fall apart, and when I look back at those costumes I think that they were well used $50. Then my youngest, we did not get to reuse her beautiful costume, but thanks to Maysco Dance Supply we were able to borrow an older costume, one that has been used for years by different dancers, and they looked great, even with 8 year old costumes. Which just reinforces my goal for this blog, let’s reuse our costumes, share them and help each other out.
As the summer gets closer I will be collecting a list of dancers who want to be part of our “co-op” and we will be able to set a way to help all of us to save money, reuse our costumes, and live a “green” life.
Sorry it took me so long to write this, but the last week of January there was a valley wide dance performance hosted my the BDTA, it is a fund raiser for scholarship money to send students to a dance camp in the summer. I have to say it was a great performance. And THANK YOU to the volunteers who make Freeze Frame happen every year without a hitch.
As I watched all the different dance studios doing their thing on stage, I saw so many beautiful costumes. And again I thought, how much money is being flushed away every year in new costumes. In the last 5 years I have only had 2 costumes that I can honestly say were worth the money, because these have been used so many times that my daughter has become tired of it and some of the seams are starting to fall apart. But other than that I have a closet full of costumes that no one is using.
I’m excited about opening lines of communication with different studios and moms so that we can network our costumes, save money and do our part in living green.
This is my first post. I wanted to describe the purpose of this blog.
Wasted Dance Costumes!!!
Through the years of dance, my daughters have acquired quite a collection of unused costumes, many of which have only been worn once. As my closet gets fuller, and us dance moms belly ache about the growing cost of costumes, I realized that its time to do something about it.
Why can’t we pass our costumes down to other classes? Or exchange them with other studios? Why can’t we find a way to change something about this growing issue?
So I decided to create an avenue of communication, and hopefully, an avenue to trade from. My plan is let as many people know about this site so that we can post our costumes. Instead of buying news every year, maybe we can set up a way to pass them on to another class.
This site is still growing and under construction; but it will be perfect in May, so that we can start getting the word out on what costumes we have and how others join the crusade to save $$$ and reuse our beautiful barely used costumes.