| CHRISTIAN WALKMy Parenting FailuresBy Cecil MurpheyGuest Writer
 
 CBN.com 
     On Christmas Eve, 1990, I learned 
    an invaluable lesson about parenting. Two years earlier, we had moved away 
    from our grown children. During that time away from them, I not only missed 
    them, but I often thought of things I had done or not done during their growing-up 
    years. Mostly, I thought of the ways I had failed them. 
 I hadn't always been physically available; I was busy making a living and 
    staying on the go. There were times when I could have hugged my three kids 
    more, listened more attentively, or just hung out with them. 
 I thought about that because I had been struggling over that very issue with 
    my own dad. He was the typically distant father, and he was also an alcoholic. 
    I had  unconsciously  
    stored up a lot of anger toward him. A decade after he died, I faced the pain, 
    but it still took me a long time to forgive him. 
 After I resolved my own father issues, I thought about my three children. 
    After I died, would they have to struggle over forgiving me? I decided I wanted 
    them to be able to talk to me and forgive me while I was still alive.
 For several days I had prayed for guidance. It wasn't going to be easy to 
    say to my grown children, "Forgive me for failing you." I wanted 
    to be prepared to open my heart and hear their accusations.
 On Christmas Eve before we opened our presents, I cleared my throat and said, 
    "I've failed you in many ways." I told them of my struggle to forgive 
    my dad. "I don't want you to have to go through that. Whatever I've done 
     and I know I've failed many ways  
    please forgive me."
 As I spoke, I particularly thought of Cecile, our middle child. She, like 
    me, had been the rebel of the family. I had wept and prayed for her more than 
    any of the others. When I finished, I closed my eyes and waited for their 
    outbursts of pain and despair.
 "I remember that no matter what I did," Cecile said after a long 
    silence, "you always loved me." Tears streamed down her cheeks. 
    
 The other two said they knew I loved them; they had nothing to forgive.
 I learned an invaluable lesson that night. I had focused on my failures and 
    all the things I did wrong; my children focused on my love for them and what 
    I did right. My children knew I loved them and that knowledge enabled them 
    to forgive any of my mistakes when they happened, rather than letting them 
    build up over the years.
 What was the lesson I learned? I did my best parenting by the way I lived 
    and not by the mistakes I had made.  Order your copy 
    of Cecil Murphey's, The God Who Pursues Other books 
    by Cecil Murphey on Shop CBN
 Cecil Murphey's 
    Web site
 
  Cecil 
    Murphey has authored and co-authored more than 90 books in such wide-ranging 
    fields as health and fitness, motivation, travel, business, and inspiration. 
    Some of those books have included ghostwritten autobiographies for singer 
    B.J. Thomas, Franklin Graham, pianist Dino Karsanakas, Chick-fil-A founder 
    S. Truett Cathy, ultra-marathon runner Stan Cottrell, and Dr. Ben Carson of 
    Johns Hopkins Hospital. You can learn more about him at www.cecilmurphey.com
      
 
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