Revisiting Our Family’s Rule of Life

FamilyRuleofLife

I first read Holly Pierlot’s A Mother’s Rule of Life back in Lent 2014.  As part of my Lenten mission, I came up with a rough sketch of our Family Rule of Life.  Since then, we have moved to a new house in a new city.  Now that we’re settled, the kids are back in the school routine, and the craziness of the holidays are over, I’m ready to share how I started revisiting our Family Rule of Life during Advent.  While my vocation and its essential duties remain the same, our surroundings, the children’s development, our relationships with God and each other have changed significantly.

Before I jump in, let’s circle back to revisit a few things:

First, what’s a “Rule of Life”?

Holly Pierlot defines a rule of life as an “examination of one’s vocation and the duties it entails, and the development of a schedule for fulfilling these responsibilities in a consistent and orderly way.”

Before I pulled together the first draft of our schedule last year, I needed to determine:

  1. What’s my vocation?  (My answer is what I call this the proper hierarchy of relationships.  The order is very intentional here.)
    1. Child of God
    2. Wife
    3. Mother
  2. What are the essential duties that my vocation entails?
    1. Child of God:  Sustain a regular prayer life, frequent the sacraments, attend Mass, and show my love of God through my love of neighbor.  I also have the responsibility to care for myself (personal prayer, recreation, good nutrition, exercise, rest) so that I can perform all of my duties well.  (My duties to self will be explored more with the 2nd P, Person.)
    2. Wife:  Holly Pierlot quotes Saint Pope John Paul II as saying that love could be defined as “availability, acceptance, and help.”  As a wife, I have the duty to: be available to my husband (Ever hear of SPICE in your NFP training?  We are to be available to our spouses Spiritually, Physically, Intellectually, Creatively, Emotionally), be accepting of all of him, and to be a helper instead of a hindrance on his journey to sainthood.  In order to fulfill my duties as a wife, I need to keep my relationship with Philip second only to my relationship with God, but above all relationships–even our children.
    3. Mother:  I can’t sum up my duties as a mother more succinctly than Holly Pierlot did in her section on parenting.  She says that it is a “call to form persons.  We’re called to bring God to our children’s spirits, truth to their minds, health to their bodies, skill to their hands, beauty and creativity to their hearts, and in all this, virtue to their wills and sanctity to their souls.”  To be my children’s primary educator means remembering Pope Pius XI’s wise words that, “Education consists essentially in preparing man for what he must be, and for what he must do here below, in order to attain the sublime end for which he was created.”  In sum, it’s my job as a Christian mother to foster my children’s relationship with God so that they can: hear His voice calling them to their specific vocation, receive the graces to live it out well, and glorify Him through their lives as a preparation for their eternal reward with Him.  Ultimately, it’s my job as a mother to raise my children to become saints.

With my vocation and essential duties at the forefront of our minds, Philip and I worked together last year to create our family mission statement.  Here it is:

The Boucher Family is a domestic church whose mission is to know, love, and serve God.  Our aim is to live intentionally as Jesus’ disciples, propel one another to sainthood, and joyfully share our love of God with others.

I still want to get our family mission statement on canvas to hang in our kitchen.  Any suggestions on a great Etsy shop or artist?

With my vocation’s duties outlined and our family mission statement written, I set out to re-draft our family’s schedule.  A lot has changed in one year!  In order to do that, I re-examined what Holly Pierlot calls the “5 Ps.”

  1. Prayer
  2. Person
  3. Partner
  4. Parent
  5. Provider

Tomorrow, I’ll focus on the first P, Prayer.  I’ll give you a glimpse into what my prayer life looks like these days.  (It looks different than it did last year when I first wrote about Prayer in our Family Rule of Life.)

Your Turn:
  • What would you consider the essential duties of your vocation?
  • If you had a family mission statement, what would it say?
  • Are you fulfilling the essential duties of your vocation?  If not, what practical changes can you make today?
  • What is keeping you from fulfilling your essential duties?
  • Are you preventing someone else from fulfilling his/her essential duties?

If you’re interested in creating your own Rule of Life, read A Mother’s Rule of Life and visit Holly Pierlot’s website for some great resources.  I would LOVE to go through the 5 P’s with you!

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2 Comments

  1. Megan Dolton

    I’m not a mother yet, but still excited to read this series of yours!! Mark and I continually discuss how we need to work to maintain the relationship hierarchy we want when/if we have children, God willing, which is identical to yours! We love discussing if we keep God above all, each other second, our children will benefit most than if they had come first on the hierarchy. You and Phil are such a great example to everyone else!!

    • Catherine Boucher

      Megan, I think you would love the general principle behind the book. While most of it applies to the schedule of a mother, anyone can glean a lot from looking at Holly’s schedule and ordering our days around the essential duties of our vocations. That proper hierarchy of relationships is so, so, so important. That’s some of the biggest advice we give couples when they’re getting married. Without it, everything else will flounder. Hope you enjoy the series! Thanks you for your sweet words. 🙂

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