Moms Love

Moms Love We are into child care n love. Showcasing the goodness of God.

27/05/2025

In a world that celebrates ease and convenience, the natural instinct of a parent is to rescue to pave the path, remove obstacles, and shield their child from pain. But what if the very thing we rush to eliminate is the foundation upon which strength is built?

Struggle is not the enemy. It is the tutor.

When a child wrestles with tying their shoes, solving a puzzle, or navigating a tough friendship, they are doing more than simply trying to “get it right.” They are learning patience, building problem-solving muscles, and developing emotional resilience. These small battles—frustrating as they may seem—are the seeds of grit, confidence, and character.

To constantly intervene is to interrupt their becoming. I shared on how you can achieve this in my book Raising the independent thinking child. You can get a copy on Amazon or any of our distributors in Nigeria and Abroad.. Follow

Letting your children struggle doesn’t mean abandoning them. It means standing close enough for support, but far enough for growth. It means saying, “I believe in your ability to figure this out,” instead of “Let me fix it for you.” It’s choosing long-term development over short-term relief.

Every caterpillar must struggle out of its cocoon to gain the strength to fly. If we cut it open to help, it may never soar.

So the next time your child says, “This is hard,” don’t be quick to swoop in. Sit with them in the discomfort. Remind them that hard things grow us. That struggling isn’t a sign of failure—it’s a sign of forming.

Because the child who is allowed to struggle today becomes the adult who knows how to stand tomorrow.

18/05/2025

PARENTING STORIES FROM THE BIBLE
“When Silence Becomes Betrayal: The Parenting Story of David and Absalom”
(2 Samuel 13–18)

David was a man after God’s heart.
A warrior. A worshipper. A king.
But when it came to parenting—David missed critical moments.
And his silence cost him his son.

The Story

Absalom wasn’t always a rebel.
He was once a son wounded, silenced, and waiting for justice.

When his sister Tamar was violated by their half-brother Amnon, David was angry…
But he did nothing.
No justice. No consequences. No comfort. Just silence.

“When King David heard of all these things, he was very angry.” — 2 Samuel 13:21

That silence broke something in Absalom.
He took matters into his own hands—murdered Amnon.
Then he ran.
And for five years, David and Absalom didn’t speak.

Parenting Lesson: Silence Is Not Neutral. It Speaks Loud.

“When parents avoid hard conversations, they create hard-hearted children.”
“Unresolved pain in your child doesn’t disappear—it turns into rebellion, bitterness, or self-sabotage.”

David loved Absalom—but love without presence, justice, and connection isn’t enough.

What David Got Wrong (and What We Must Get Right)

1. He Was Emotionally Distant

David avoided the hard work of healing—both his own and his son’s.
He left wounds open and expected time to do what only truth and connection can.

“A distant parent creates desperate children.”

2. He Delayed Reconciliation

When Absalom returned to Jerusalem, David still refused to see him for two more years.
That delay deepened the damage.
By the time David reached out, Absalom’s heart was already hardened.

“Don’t wait until your child becomes a stranger before you start acting like a parent.”

3. He Confused Passivity With Peace

David thought ignoring the situation would protect peace.
But passive parenting is not peaceful—it’s neglectful.

“What you don’t confront in your family will eventually confront you in public.”

Absalom stole the hearts of the people and rebelled against it

07/05/2025

We scroll all day but refuse to learn what a child needs emotionally.
We post matching outfits but ignore emotional trauma.
We chase influence while our children quietly unravel.

No child deserve to enter this world, only to survive neglect.

07/05/2025

“Many people don’t deserve children.”
That’s a hard statement but sometimes, it’s a painfully true one.

I read this post recently and I thought...
Not an hour-old diaper. Not a morning mess.
A full day of filth, neglect, and discomfort.

This is not about being tired. Parenting is exhausting we know that.

This is about something deeper: the erosion of basic human empathy.

Some parents are raising children they don’t nurture.
They clothe them, feed them sometimes, but leave their souls, emotions, and needs abandoned. Children becoming collateral damage in the chaos of broken adults.

This generation is raising children in the age of information, yet many remain willfully ignorant.

We scroll all day but refuse to learn what a child needs emotionally.
We post matching outfits but ignore emotional trauma.
We chase influence while our children quietly unravel.

Parenting is not just a biological role it’s a divine stewardship. And when we treat children like inconveniences instead of a divine assignments they are, we wound them… sometimes beyond repair.

No child deserves to enter this world only to survive neglect.

broken parents will always raise broken children.

So before you call yourself a parent, ask:
Am I truly nurturing a life, or am I just managing one?

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