Related Categories
Recommended Products
Related Links


Tell a friend

Enter your Email and a friends Email, then click the send button, and we will send them an Email with a link to this Article.

Your Email:

Their Email

 

 

Informative Articles

List of all Articles in Baby Names
Here you can browse through a list of all the article titles in this category, or maybe search for an article that you have seen before and want to read again. If you can't find what you're looking for here then why not try our related categories section.

Budgeting For Baby
If you are expecting an addition to your family, or just planning on having a baby in the future, you need to start thinking about how you are going to budget for your little one. Many first-time parents are shocked when they realize how much having...

Charm Jewelry: It's Not Just For Kids
Create Heirlooms and Personalized Jewelry in Traditional or Italian Styles History of Charm Bracelets Charm bracelets have been popular from as early as 500 B.C., when Assyrians, Babylonians and even Persians wore charms which they associated...

Imperfect Parenting
Shortly after having my first baby, I decided I was going to be the perfect parent. I immediately began to keep an intelligent library of child-rearing books on my nightstand and would replenish the stock as each book was absorbed into my...

Pretty And Frugal Gift Wrap Ideas
Sometimes gift wrapping can be so expensive -- once you’ve bought the paper, tissue and the card you’ve spent just as much as you did on the gift. Here are some pretty and frugal gift wrap ideas to help you save more so you can spend more on your...

The Chinese Year of the Rat
The Chinese Year Of The Rat.. People born under the Chinese sign of the Rat are lucky! Rats are intelligent and great with people, surrounding themselves with many friends. The Rat's natural charisma ensures they are the centre of attention at...

 
Google
A Modern Hope Chest

When our neighbors moved away, they left behind an old cedar chest and wanted to know if our family would like to have it. I was sure I could find some use for it. They're not that easy to come by, and it was still in pretty good shape.

I already had an older cedar chest, handed down to me from my father's mother. It had some old keepsakes in it--a framed pressed flower, a Dutch Bible, a household expense record my grandpa had kept long before I was born. To these treasures I added my mother's wedding dress, my high school year books, and my daughter's handmade baby dresses and blankets.

The new cedar chest ended up in the living room as storage for extra blankets. Every once in awhile I glance at it and think I should use it as a hope chest for my daughter.

My daughter is 14 now, and she's going to be grown up and moved out before I know it. I've always toyed with the idea of giving her a hope chest, but it seems so old-fashioned.

My daughter is a normal Christian teenage girl, trying to hold on to her faith while living in a world that is constantly sending her mixed messages. "Date," "Don't date," "Experiment," "Wait until you're married." She and her friends struggle with these life-changing decisions every day.

My daughter dreams of the day she gets married. She hopes to meet her husband in college, settle down, and raise a family. Any choices she makes along the way could change the outcome of her dream.

All she has to hold on to are "faith" and "hope." Faith that she will be faithful to wait for the man God has intended for her, and hope that her dreams of marriage will some day come true.

This is partially where the term "hope chest" originated. Originally they were called wedding chests, but Americans later called them hope chests as in "hope for marriage" and the promise of love and security.

If we as parents want to reinforce these values in our children, we must come up with ways to get these ideas across to them without shoving them down their throats. They have to share the dream with you and make it their own.

One way to share your vision of your daughter's wedded future, is to prepare a hope chest for her. Hope chests were traditionally used to store hand-embroidered linens, to protect them until the bride was ready to use them in her new home.

What you place in your daughter's hope chest is up to you and your daughter. Handmade items seem to be the most meaningful. It would also be a good place to store family photographs and albums for safe keeping.

When my daughter was about seven we started a tradition of buying her a Christmas ornament every year. When she leaves home she will take with her a collection of her own ornaments, each with a memory of a unique year of her life.

I will give her the baby dresses and blankets, and any other childhood mementos I have saved, like her birth sampler or favorite childhood storybooks for her own children.

Anything your daughter takes with her will help her to make her new house into a home. The memories she brings with her will be the start of new memories in her own family.

The more you and your daughter can share the dream and the hope for her future, the more likely she will be to hold on to the dream and carry it into her adulthood.


About the Author

Rachel Paxton is a freelance writer and mom of four. For complete resources for the Christian home, visit her web site at http://www.Christian-Parent.com.