I Have 7 Kids By Choice
I've always loved kids and family and friends and cutting up with cousins and cutting up with goofy uncles and tickling babies and hearing how I'm "growing like a weed," and I don't even mind hearing about the ailments and the aches and the pains the elder family members are going through because growing old is part of life and I enjoy—and hold sacred—every moment of life from conception to natural death.
Schaeffers + 2 + 2 (Fall 2023)
As I write start update this on 1/17/14 2/11/14 8/21/16 10/23/20, 7/28/21, 7/16/24, my oldest son is 27 and working in Silicon Valley after graduating in the first class of Minerva Schools, with almost no college debt.
My second son is 26, a graduate of UC San Marcos—completely debt-free with money in the bank—has his real estate license, is a purple belt in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, he's married to his high school sweetheart and their little man turned one in June.
My oldest daughter is now 24. She's graduated college with no debt, got married in 2022—two months after her brother—and had her first child three months after her brother, and will have her second child next month, less than a year apart, just like her two brothers!
My fourth child (second daughter) is 22 and graduated from UCSD with her teaching degree and credentials and no debt.
My fifth child is 19 and is rooming with her older sister in San Diego. She is working with her sister at a restaurant as she goes into her second year of physical therapy school.
My sixth child is going into her junior year in high school after being homeschooled through 8th grade as her three older sisters were. She's excelling in volleyball and lacrosse, helps at two local churches, and is working at an ice cream shop where her sister used to work, and is owned by one of our parishioners
The baby is 10, and she's a handful!! I'll just leave it at that.
Between the 6th and 7th births, we had three miscarriages, so there are three Schaeffer baby angels in Heaven now, so our 7th on earth is really our 10th child.
Crazy, huh?
But you know what's crazier?
Ever since we had our third child in under three years—4/22/97, 4/17/98, 2/7/00—people have always said,
Boy, you sure have your hands full."
Or
Bless her heart. That poor little mama doesn't know what she's gotten herself into."
Or asked:
Don't you know what causes that? (Yes we do...and we like it very much.)
Don't you own a TV? (Should we turn it on more often or less often? That one always confused me.)
Are you done yet? (Oh, you mean like a loaf of bread?)
Are you Catholic or Mormon? (I'll drink to that.)
You should get a traveling sales job. (Would that make me want to snuggle with my wife more or less?)
Don't you know how much college costs? (We sure do, and we think it's over-priced and not mandatory, and we're also not obligated to pay for it for any of them.)
How can you spend enough quality time with them? (How many trips to the mall does it take to equal 15 minutes giggling with eight other family members at the park or in the backyard on the trampoline or playing jump rope in the cul de sac?)
You should get "fixed." (Apparently, everything is in perfect working order, so maybe you mean I should go get "broken." Why do we want to break what is working as God intended?)
There's an old adage in persuasion/negotiation/manipulation/obfuscation that goes,
If you get them to ask the wrong questions, it doesn't matter what the truth is."
Edmund Burke said
All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. Do not allow evil to triumph. Do not do sit by and do nothing."
The Devil succeeds when he gets us to define good as bad and bad as good.
People now think having a large family full of love and bickering, giggling and tantrums, hugs and kisses, stinky diapers, and loads of laundry and love is bad, but
- living alone, and
- "seeing the world", and
- "sowing your oats", and
- living out of a suitcase, and
- doing yoga alone on a tropical beach, and
- posting pictures of it on Instagram (how can you do yoga and take pictures?), and
- remaining childless and making your business or your dog "your child" is good.
(And why is the attire and the routine and the liturgy of the yogi "enlightened" but the attire and the routine and the liturgy of the Catholic mass "stifling" or "antiquated"? But I digress.)
Look, we're all called to our own vocations, and sometimes the journey is rocky and hard and cold and wet and confusing and difficult.
But it's hard to stay the course when we see all of these "sexy," fun-loving, jet-setting partiers getting interviewed on TV or posting their exotic photoshoot on their blog telling us "you can have it all" if you just attend their 3-day pitch fest conference, join their mastermind group, buy their DVD, or enroll in their membership program for 18 months at half of your disposable income per month!
But most of us have nothing in common with most of these gurus like the...
Single guy who was sleeping on his friend's couch...
and finally got motivated to build a business, and now he's living large and running a membership site that shows people how they, too, can fly around the country, dancing and drinking at bars and interviewing other partying entrepreneurs or the...
Single woman who threw caution to the wind...
and quit the Corporate America gig and now leads a nomadic life and conducts webinars from exotic beaches and sleeps at friends' homes around the world and only visits with family every couple of years or the...
Married woman whose husband hates his job...
so she "slaves" away (with no kids and a house cleaner, and her husband makes 6-figures on Wall Street), builds a consulting/training/speaking business, and once that's successful, the husband quits his job and joins her, or the...
Single guy who hit a lick in business and quit cold turkey...
because, although the work was financially rewarding, it was sucking the life out of him, and slaved away in obscurity for six months before launching a risky venture and hitting it big (I know this guy. He's a great guy but readily admits his story is tough for others to do.) or the...
Divorced guy with sketchy "academic" credentials...
who makes his living teaching about relationships and communication to throngs of people who pay to hear his story, hoping to find the secret to relationships and communication, or the...
Divorced woman who makes her living teaching people...
to be inspired and follow their passions, which is actually just her thinly veiled journey to find exactly that while fighting off or ignoring her own emptiness inside, or the...
Progressive who wants you to believe "raising a business"...
is as important or difficult or meaningful or fulfilling as raising a child, so you should worship her sex appeal—aptly demonstrated in her tight leather pants—and be motivated to follow her.
I will stipulate...
that being an entrepreneur and starting and building and running a successful business is hard work, and anyone—ANYONE— that is making it happen deserves respect, and it's worth your time to analyze how they did it to see what you can glean from their journey and apply to building your own business.
Just realize that the examples I described above are all real, and they are prolific, and they are informative, and they are the exceptions, not the rule.
Learn from them all.
Emulate their techniques and tactics but realize the grass is not greener, and it still needs watering and mowing. (Isn't it interesting that the grass you water and take care of tends to grow nice and green? Funny how that works, isn't it?)
Success is defined in many ways, not just in the size of your bank account how many followers you have on Twitter, or what exotic island you call home for Christmas.
I'll stick with the Bible's version of success, as we see in Deuteronomy 7:14,
You will be blessed above all peoples; no man or woman among you shall be childless nor shall your livestock be barren."
Since the beginning of time and creation, which are one and the same, children have been a blessing. (CAN I GET AN AMEN??!!)
Now if I can only get my homeowner's association to approve livestock, I'll really be in the money!
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Market like you mean it.
Now go sell something.