Manila Bulletin

What godparents are really for

- By LORAINE BALITA-CENTENO

Your child’s godparents should be people you trust to give proper guidance, sound advice, and reliable support. They are to stay connected throughout the child’s life to provide a sense of security.

Long before the post of the godmother who felt harassed by the parent of her godchild went viral, I have been planning to write something about godparents and what they should really be for. I feel there is a need to remind parents about the nonmateria­l but infinitely more important and more precious gifts a godparent can give our children.

When we are tempted to go on a hunt for the seemingly elusive godparent who you think is obliged to give the child a gift every Christmas, remind yourself what godparents are really for.

Their role in your child’s life is way more important than the money you might be expecting them to shell out every Christmas, much more meaningful than the material things you might be expecting them to give.

Their role as godparents is to help you guide and raise the child. In your absence godparents are to treat your kids like family, if you’re lucky they are to treat them like their own. When it’s time for you to leave your kids forever, with hope, their godparents will be there for them—to help them grieve, heal, and carry on.

Godparents are to be part of your child’s support system, so as he grows up he has more people to turn to in times of trouble, and not just financial trouble.

Your child’s godparents should be people you trust to give proper guidance, sound advice, and reliable support. They are to stay connected throughout the child’s life to provide a sense of security.

We as parents are supposed to nurture our child’s relationsh­ip with the godparents, help them see these people not as cash cows, and gift factories but as family, as people they can turn to most importantl­y for emotional or spiritual support; people who will genuinely care about them and have their best interest at heart; people who will give them the gift of love, support, and understand­ing throughout their lifetime.

We are to bring them closer to their godparents and ask not gifts for our children but time and a promise—a promise that they will try their very best to be a part of our child’s life all throughout, a promise that they will look out for our kids long after we’re gone.

A godparent who stays connected throughout your child’s life, who checks on your child often, who makes himself or herself available for conversati­ons and consultati­ons, who visits and spends time with your kids, and who will always want the best for your child is much more important than one who sends money but is almost always nowhere to be found, who sends gifts but doesn’t care much about your children.

This year, maybe it’s time for us to stop asking for gifts and start asking for time instead. Maybe it’s time for us parents to stop keeping tabs on how much cash so and so godparent was able to give and how much so and so wasn’t able to shell out. Maybe it’s time for us to nurture our children’s relationsh­ips with their godparents, it’s time for us to make them part of our children’s lives the whole year ’round and not just every Christmas.

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