
The Meridian
Family Value of the Month — Introduction
By
Richard and Linda Eyre
Today is a red-letter day for Meridian and for LDS families, because
today Meridian will launch a program that is designed to strengthen
families. The Meridian Family Value series will feature a new
family value every month, together with suggestions on how that
family value can be taught in the home.
We are honored
to be involved in this program, because we believe that
- The family
is the basic unit of society.
- Society
will change only as the families within it change.
- Families
are strengthened by the ingraining of fundamental values.
We are personally
more aware than ever before of the powerful forces that unite
the families of the whole world despite the forces that are trying
to divide and destroy them. On a recent speaking tour, we
went around the globe twice and spoke in 38 different locations
on parenting and on Teaching Children Values. (Look at the picture
of the back of a "world tour” t-shirt that our concert-going
kids had us put together.)

Family values “world tour” t-shirt
We were in
Budhist, Muslim, Hindu, and Christian
countries, in places of affluence and poverty, in very liberal
and very conservative societies, and were with parents from vastly
varied circumstances and perspectives.
And guess
what? When it came to their children, to the concerns and
hopes and emotions they felt for them, and to the basic values
they wanted to teach them, they were all the same!
Whatever it may be that divides us on this planet, none of it
is as strong as what unites us when it comes to our feelings for
our children and our desires about what they should learn and
how they should live.
One father
in Thailand said, "A
good definition of a conservative is 'a flaming liberal with a
teenage daughter.'" A mother in Indonesia
said, "What I want most is for my children to be better people
than I am, and live a happier life than I have." And
a couple in India who
were planning to send their children to the U.S.
for college but worried about them losing their identity, paraphrased
our old Mormon cliché almost word for word when they said, "We
want our children to be able to operate in the bigger world, but
not to be of that world."

Men and women all over the world want the same things for their
families.
What a joy
to be part of an effort what essentially says, "Since all
of us parents essentially want the same values for our children,
let's unite and work together in teaching those values — sharing
our ideas, our worries, and our methods as we focus and concentrate
and work on the same value each month"!
The Meridian
site is the perfect place to do it. We all log on often,
we read the articles that interest us, and while we are here,
we look at the Meridian Family Value of the Month and pick up
on the ideas that we think will work with our kids. And
when we each discover something that works in our own home, we
take a minute the next time we are on Meridian to submit it so
other parents can try it too.
Sometimes
parenting can be a pretty lonely proposition. We sit in
our own home in our own little part of the world, and we think
no one else has quite as hard a time with getting a child to mind,
or to pick up his stuff, or to stop fighting with her brother,
or to stop spending so much time with kids who are a bad influence,
or to stay off the X-Box or the wrong part of the Internet.
And much of our parenting is reactionary or "defensive"
— just trying to correct and to discipline and to stop bad things
from getting worse.
The idea of
the Meridian Family Value off the Month is to empower and unite
us as parents, to give us the motivation and encouragement of
knowing that tens if not hundreds of thousands of parents, spread
throughout the world, are working with their kids on the same
value that you are working on this month.
And the other
idea of it is to give us an offense that lets us be proactive
as parents rather than reactive and always on the defense.
Teaching our children specific values — really ingraining basic
values into their souls — is an initiative of the first order,
and it will prevent many of the problems that we would otherwise
spend forever trying to defend against.

The Meridian Family Value program will strengthen your family
tree from the roots to the highest leaf.
This whole
program is based on four basic premises:
- There are
certain universal values that are part of every religious and
moral tradition and that parents everywhere want for their children
because they know that they lead to a happier and fuller life.
LDS parents are particularly attuned to these values and can
take a leadership role in making them available (and attractive)
to parents everywhere.
- These specific
values can be clearly identified and taught to children.
What it takes is focus and concentration on each value for a
defined period — with methods that are tried and proven.
And it takes repetition. This focus and this repetition
can be facilitated by defining and refining moral principles
into twelve Values — one for each month — and then by concentrating
for a full month on a particular value. At the end of
each year, the twelve values can "start over" in families
where each child is now a year older and will learn the same
values on a new level each year.
- Different
methods for teaching each value will work best for different
families with different age children in different situations.
Parents do best when they have a lot of ideas and methods to
choose from, and when they can both receive and share methods
from and with other parents.
- There is
no better place to share and to mutually motivate than on the
Internet. Meridian Magazine starts with nearly a million
readers, nearly all of whom are parents or have a special interest
in children. Many will just "consume"
or use ideas that are presented, but many others will also want
to share their own ideas and experiences on line.
So — here
we go. Starting tomorrow, we will introduce COURAGE,
the first Meridian Family Value of the Month, and will share the
first crop of ideas for teaching it to your children. Then,
as the month of August rolls by, we will add additional ideas,
thoughts, and techniques here on Meridian a couple of times a
week, and you will be able to click, at any time, to the Meridian
Family Value of the Month Workshop where you can read the inputs
of other parents and add your own.
We look forward
to sharing ideas with you, and to learning what you can teach
us all.
All the best,
Richard and Linda Eyre