Jan 30, 2009

Proverbs 31 Woman Updated


Kate Dolan has an updated and humorous version of the Proverbs 31 woman.


A wife of noble character who can find?

She is worth more than a Nintendo system with Rock Band and Wii Fit all bundled together.

Her husband trusts her with all the credit cards and the remote control.

She brings him excellent credit ratings all the days of her life.

She selects volunteer cutting assignments from the kindergarten teacher and works with eager hands.

She is like merchant ships, bringing in food from the store with the best coupon deals that week.

She gets up before the clock radio kicks on; and microwaves sausage patties for her family.

She considers a lottery ticket and buys it; out of her Bunco winnings she enters a basket bingo and wins a birthday gift for her mother-in-law.

She works out at the gym vigorously; her arms are strong enough that she doesn't have too much of that hanging flab when she raises her forearms.

She sees that she's getting a good return on her 401(k) rollover, and her lamp always goes out at a reasonable time (but she can turn it back on if the kids need something or the dog starts whining).

In her hand she holds the steering wheel and grasps the box of Cheez-Its to hand out to the kids in the carpool.

When it snows, she has no fear for her household; for she has arranged to go in late for work on days when schools open on a two-hour delay.

She makes her bed most days even if no one's coming over.

Her husband is respected at the city sports stadium, where he takes his seat among the season ticket-holders.

She makes allergen-free brownies and sells them at the bake sale and supplies the scout troop with sodas for the party.

She is clothed with strength and dignity, or at least sweats that are clean, with not too many paint spatters.

She can laugh at the ridiculously high heating bill.

She speaks with wisdom, and can faithfully instruct her family on how to change the bag in the vacuum cleaner.

She watches over the affairs of her children text messaging each other in the same room and does not eat anything from the Cheesecake Factory.

Her children arise and, though they call her really bad names, at least they're up in time to get ready for school.

Her husband praises her (from his seat with the season ticket-holders): ``Many women do noble things, but you surpass them all.''

Charm is deceptive, and beauty is fleeting; but a woman who has read this far in my bad paraphrase deserves to be praised.

Give her the reward she has earned: A rest. (In other words, that's the end).


The original article can be found here.

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