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Rating: Summary: Raw honest prayers ... needed to raise a child today. Review: As a children's counselor I keep a first edition in my desk and frequently buy it as a gift for colleagues. Edelman has written and collected a set of prayers, thoughts and musings that can encourage the weary, inspire the hopeful and comfort the restless among us who work for children.
Rating: Summary: Inspiration to all who care for or about children. Review: As a children's counselor I keep a first edition in my desk and frequently buy it as a gift for colleagues. Edelman has written and collected a set of prayers, thoughts and musings that can encourage the weary, inspire the hopeful and comfort the restless among us who work for children.
Rating: Summary: The Raw Honest Prayers Needed to Raise a Child Today. Review: I have no children, yet I seek to pray for the children of the world. Marian Wright Edelman has helped me to do this, more, and better.Her preface to "Guide My Feet" is worth the purchase price alone. The mini-biography of how her family, faith and community supported her struggles through the black/white segregation in America and how she broke through to become a woman who has brought social reform to our country is a notable portrait indeed. Her collection of prayers are poetic, pensive and will penetrate through our hectic, occupied lives: "Lord , let me not be so busy working to buy the things that my children want that I cannot give them the time and attention and love they need." Just before I picked up Edelman's book, I finished reading Eric Schlosser's "Fast Food Nation: The Dark Side of the All-American Meal" (Highly Recommended - see my review). As Marian Edelman worries in every fiber of her being, "about our many children who, lacking a sense of the sacred or internal moral mooring are, trying to grow up in a society without boundaries" and the "relentless cultural messages glamorizing violence, sex, possessions, alcohol, and tobacco", Schlosser will, if you read the books in tandem, show in "Fast Food Nation" that we all need to increase our concern and prayers towards the omnipresence marketing efforts directed daily at our children. Yes, prayer works, but so does responsible parenting. These two books should be read concurrently. As Schlosser notes "the typical American child now spends about twenty-one (21) hours a week watching television - roughly one and a half months of TV every year. About 25% of American Children between the ages of two and five have a TV in their room". Marian Edelman's prayer, "God help us to shut off television and radio and computer and phone so that we can communicate with each other." is timely indeed. Every month 90% of American children between three and nine visit a McDonald's. Each year fast food chains annually spend more than $3 billion on television advertising directed at children. A taste for fat developed in childhood is difficult to lose as an adult, and obesity is extremely difficult to cure. That said, and noting the above statistic, please remember that over one-quarter of all American children are obese or very overweight (African American children leading this group). Perhaps, besides prayer, we should also use modified Biblical quotes to protect our children; "McDonald's get hence behind me". The prayers of this book plead with, and petition God (as most prayers do) in a raw, honest way that comes from the heart of a parent who desperately loves her children. The wisdom and prayers found in this book will affect you and hopefully infect you with the same raw honesty needed to raise a child today. Highly recommended.
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