Money Management for Parents: A Parent’s Guide Book to Finances, Economics, and Raising Children to Achieve Financial Freedom
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This Books Contains 2 of our most popular Books to help with Finances, Economics, and Raising Children to Achieve Financial Freedom
Money Management for Parents: A Parent’s Guide Book to Finances, Economics, and Raising Children to Achieve Financial Freedom Includes Following Books:
Parenting: How to be a Great Parent and Raise Awesome Kids
Parenting Economics 101: How to be Financially Stable in an Unstable World
We have created this collection to give you an all-inclusive book to reference when searching for help with Finances, Economics, and Raising Children
If you’re looking for solid answers that guide you in the right direction this book is for you. This book will give you the answers you’ve been searching for. This book is a must for anyone who is serious about learning more about Guiding their Family’s Finances, Economics, and Children to Achieve Financial Freedom.
We look forward to assisting you within this book and welcome your feedback.
Find Out More Inside . . .
Patrick Baldwin
Patrick J. Baldwin was born on July 30, 1965 in Vallejo, California. He is the youngest of three children. He spent his early childhood in Connecticut; the state he calls home. He graduated from high school in 1984 from Northbrook High School in Houston. He held numerous jobs after high school until sixteen years later he found his calling. He became an LVN in 1997 and has been working as a LVN/Surgical Technologist in one of the South’s largest hospital systems ever since. Patrick plays the piano, is always trying to whittle down the stack of books by his bed, loves to cook, enjoys composing music on his computer, and has learned over the years that writing is not only enjoyable, but therapeutic. He loves to write about real-life events mixed with fiction and some of his own dreams and fantasies. He got his joy of reading and writing from his mother, Joyce, who passed away in 2010 from a failed liver transplant. He misses her terribly and dedicates all of his writing to her. For comments, rants, and raves, Patrick can be contacted at pjbaldwin1965@att.net
Read more from Patrick Baldwin
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Money Management for Parents - Patrick Baldwin
Special Request
Thank you for purchasing our book and supporting our Ministry. We actually have two requests – To Pray for Our Ministry and to Read this Book All the Way through. No Ministry can Survive without Prayers and Support so we ask you to keep our Ministry in Your Daily Prayers and Pray as the Lord leads.
We encourage you to Read the Book you purchased all the way through. Many Books NEVER Get Read, and the ones that do only get read the first few pages.
One of our Special Request is that if you are serious about learning the material in this book that you take time to actually read this book in its entirety – all the way through.
We all lead such busy lives nowadays and can get side tracked so easily, please take a moment to consider my words and read to the end of the book and keep us in Your Prayers.
Thank You once again for purchase. We deeply appreciate Your Prayers and Support and know that God will Bless You as You continue to Bless this Ministry.
Table of Contents
Special Request
Parenting
Preamble
Chapter 1: Don’t Lie to Your Kids
Chapter 2: Health
Chapter 3: Safety
Chapter 4: Awareness
Chapter 5: Education
Chapter 6: Boys and Girls
Chapter 7: Spiritual Upbringing
Chapter 8: Political Involvement
Chapter 9: Being A Late Bloomer
Chapter 10: Conclusion
Parenting Economics 101
Chapter 1: Financially Stability
Chapter 2: Two-Income Families
Chapter 3: Paring it Down
Chapter 4: Don’t Be Afraid Of Money
Chapter 5: It Is Not A Sin To Be Rich
Chapter 6: The Jesus-Style of Living
Chapter 7: What is Failure
Chapter 8: Work and Family
Chapter 9: Creative Income Solutions
Chapter 10: Final Thoughts on Financial Stability
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Parenting
How to be a Great Parent and Raise Awesome Kids
By Patrick Baldwin
Preamble
There’s nothing like being a parent. Parenting is the absolute greatest and most honorable job on earth. It’s also the most difficult, terrifying, amazing, and most fulfilling job on earth. When it comes to raising kids most parents are eager to listen and learn from those who’ve been-there-done-that. We crave knowing what works and what doesn’t when it comes to getting your baby to sleep through the night, potty training, homework, monitoring social media, setting rules and guidelines, and all those other parenting ‘things’.
I want to suggest, however, that parenting is about much more than the things that have just been mentioned. Parenting is about teaching our children who to be and not just what to be. Or as I like to say, Parenting is being there; listening, talking, forgiving, asking forgiveness and most of all, loving with the same unconditional love we receive from Jesus.
That’s the reason for this book—to provide you with the encouragement and instruction necessary to raise up your children to be respectful, intelligent, confident, compassionate, responsible, and Godly people – You know, Awesome Kids!.
Each of the individual subject matters we’re going to look at will address both the physical or tangible aspects and the intangible or emotional aspects of parenting.
So without further ado, let’s get started. Let’s get down to the joys of parenting with our best foot, heart, and mind forward.
Chapter 1: Don’t Lie to Your Kids
Just like the chapter on sexuality, this chapter is going to be short and sweet. In fact, I could easily sum up the subject of lying to your children by simply saying, Don’t do it...not ever!
and be done. I’m actually tempted to do that, but me being me, I can’t quite bring myself to do it. I want to expound on the subject of lying by saying the following...
There is no such thing as a good Lie
A lie is a lie is a lie. To say it’s just a little lie or a half-truth is like saying a woman is just a little bit pregnant. It’s not possible.
I know some of you are thinking about all those times when you’ve been asked Did you get my birthday present yet?
or Is there really a Santa Claus?
or Who is the tooth fairy...really?
or Did Fluffy go to heaven?
When your little ones ask questions like this, rather than lying, you simply need to say, I am the tooth fairy.
Or I don’t know if Fluffy is in heaven but the Bible talks about animals in heaven so he might be. I’m sure if animals are in heaven Fluffy will be there, too.
Now were talking about Christmas, Easter or any other such holiday that there is some kind of supernatural character you want to let your child know right from the beginning that there is no such thing as Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny, the tooth fairy or any other such thing. Not some parents these things may be a tradition or commonplace and not even thought about.
However, it’s important to start from the very beginning with a vow to yourself, to child and to God never to lie to one another. If you let your yes be yes and you know be no you’ll do well.
The reason why this is of such a critical importance is because this is the foundation for building a great relationship with your child, not only now but also in the future when they become an adult. If you begin to lie to them even about something you may feel to be a harmless tradition such as Christmas and Santa Claus you are setting up yourself and your child for serious problems to come.
So let’s walk through a scenario: for the first X amount of years you have if told and taught your child Santa is real and then through whatever means they find out that this is all been a lie, that their parent has lied to them for so many years – how do you think they are going to feel, what do you think this will do to your relationship?
Ultimately lies are the seeds of destruction for any relationship, especially one between children and their parents – guard your relationship with the ever present vigilance necessary to ensure its proper growth and development.
In my humble opinion it is better to be brutally honest than to cover a truth with a lie. That being said you have to talk with your children in a matter in which is age appropriate. You obviously don’t want to traumatize your child by giving them more information about a given topic (whatever that topic is) than they can handle further age. My philosophy has always been a gradual increase philosophy with everything, and thus by the time that they are grown you have a well-balanced awesome kid, all grown up, but always your kid.
You’ll notice I left the Santa question until last. That’s because in my opinion, it is one that needs to be handled gently in order to help give children the capability to enjoy every aspect of the holiday season and to be respectful of the way parents of your children’s peers choose to handle the situation. You have to be the guiding light and the source of truth for your child but do it in a manner that is age-appropriate and does not cause further confusion.
If you’ve already started traditions that have been based on a lie there is still time depending upon their age to undo the situation.
Don’t just think because you’ve already established specific traditions that are based on lie that you should sit back and do nothing about it, assuming that in time they will understand. Well to that I say you are indeed correct, In time they will definitely understand
but what they will understand is that their mother or father has lied to them. So my advice to you is to make a good-faith effort to rectify the situation, to rebuild potential trust that may have been lost in the past, and talk to your kids – have a conversation, a serious conversation with them (again age-appropriate) in which you promise each other moving forward that no matter what you will always tell them the truth.
Here is what I suggest for handling the Santa question
...
If your children already know about Santa and are trying to decide whether or not he is real, help them reason it out and come to the truth on their own or if age appropriate burst their bubble and tell them the whole thing is a hoax. Think of it like a Band-Aid – it’s better to pull it off quickly than to try to do it slowly, painfully, step by painful step.
You can do this by asking them:
How they think it would be possible for Santa to give every child gifts
How do they think Santa could travel the world in a few hours
Remind them that reindeer can’t fly—that only birds can fly
Talk about the climate of the North Pole
Once they see the reasoning, be honest and tell them Santa is something that is made up.
Remind them of the fact that Christmas is a time to celebrate Jesus’ birth and