Prayer time has been somewhat interesting around here lately. Most nights my boy’s prayers are filled with random comments about his favorite toy, favorite show, and favorite color interjected with giggles and laughter and fake burps. But one night this past week he said something that really caught me off guard.
He prayed for love.
Love?
I paused for second, trying to figure out why on earth he would pray for that…I do love him, we love him, Jesus loves him. We try and show him that every day with our words and actions.
But when I asked him about it, what he said caught me by surprise. He said, “You don’t love me how I want to be loved sometimes.”
This totally caught me off guard– because this sounded strangely familiar to a conversation I had just had with my husband.
We had been talking about how hard it was sometimes as a husband and wife to reach out to the other in ways that helped each of us feel loved and cared for. That sometimes, the way I think he needs love is not the way he really needs it, and vice versa.
And obviously, my boy felt the exact same way. So I asked him to write out what he needed love to be, and this is what he wrote:
L- lots of laughter
O- our family together
V- video games instead of homework (um, no!)
E- everyone being like Jesus
It was really sweet to see what he needed (and a little of what he “wanted” like the video games!)…he wanted quality time, lots of joy, and lots of the kind of love that only Jesus can give and teach.
So I try and make sure to give him a healthy dose of what he needs, in addition to what I want to give him.
How about you? When is the last time you asked your child what their version of love is and how can you act on it?















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