Categories
Fulfillment Faith

Your turn: I was jealous

Wow, ladies. I’m very impressed! I threw out what I thought was a very “angsty” post—which I thought could be (and would be) easily dismissed. But many of you took the time to write thoughtful, heartfelt and most of all helpful answers. Would I be presumptuous to say that they were written with concern, compassion and sympathy?

I’m just so impressed that I wanted to highlight many of the responses here. Now, I know that not everyone has struggled with feeling dissatisfied, burdened, inconvenienced or whatever you want to call it, but I was very relieved to have my suspicions confirmed—I’m not alone.

I acknowledged in my post that adjusting my expectations was one way of trying to deal with this. (Although I’m not very good at that all the time.) Robin had further advice: go specifically to kid-friendly places. As silly as this may sound, I actually usually do try to struggle through dinner in a sit-down restaurant with Hayden (on the infrequent occasions that we actually go out). I have learned through sad experience that this is a recipe for disaster. Robin points out the importance of lots of entertaining toys for tots in public. Let me add that you can never have enough toys. And nothing you offer a child who has developed a taste for soda will satisfy his desire until you share with him.

Madame M points out that realizing the importance of spending time with your children is another way to appreciate it more. She’s absolutely right. In ten years, are you going to remember snuggling with your children or that episode of CSI:? And what will they remember? Perspective doesn’t always make things easier, but it can make the right choice more obvious.

Lindsey, my friend of whom I was jealous, says that it’s important to remember—and even okay to acknowledge—that we, as moms, have needs and desires, too. That’s a problem that I deal with in this area, too. I get so tired of subjugating my needs to his—sometimes I just want to take a shower or read or knit or eat in peace. Eating, sleeping: pretty basic needs, I think. I’ve been known to think, “Okay, Hayden, you win. You win. You win—again. I am nothing; my physical needs mean nothing; you win. I am broken. Again.” (That was especially common when he was a year old and still not sleeping through the night.) It sounds pretty psycho in the light of day, but I still remember very keenly that feeling. I’m a mother now, but I still have wants and I still have needs—and thank you, Lindsey, for reminding me that it’s okay to recognize that!

Julie felt like she was going out on a limb to say that she just found it easier to parent older children. Lucy agreed with her. Even with my limited experience, I believe that there are certainly easier ages to parent (and those ages are due to personality and personal preferences for the parents and the children alike). I know some men who feel like they’re all thumbs around newborns (and go so far as to tell their friends that they don’t really like babies!). As much as I loved Hayden, I found the newborn/zero feedback/blob stage very challenging. He is so entertaining these days (he was a total ham for my extended family at dinner last night!)—and by the same token, so exhausting. He really is a good kid, though.

Bellevelma—yes, it does help to hear that time will help. I’ve got nothing but time. In fact, I think that was a prevailing theme throughout most of the comments: Robin and Bellevelma both said it outright, and I think that time is also a factor in being able to better parent older children, like Julie and Lucy said. There are two things that change with time: us and our children. Our children grow and mature and suddenly become more manageable (we all hope!) and presentable in public. We also grow and mature and earn more hard-won patience and parenting skills. Kinda cool how that works.

Offline, my mother also suggested reading scriptures about charity to help build my patience. (I tried reading scriptures about patience; it made me impatient :\ .) I really believe that being a mother is God’s will for me (and for most women), and that I’m doing the right thing by dedicating my life to my children, as hard as it is. In fact, I’ve come to believe that a major reason why we’re supposed to have children is because this life is the time for us to learn to be humble, to cease to be selfish, to soften our hearts, to give up our will for that of God—and I really feel that having children can teach me that, if I let it.

Thank you for all your responses. Really, you helped to lift my spirits.

Categories
Fulfillment Faith

Motherhood continues to surprise me with its fulfillment

Today’s post is from a friend of mine. She posted it on Facebook this week and with her permission, I’m reposting it here today.

For some strange reason I don’t seem to get this thought ingrained in my brain. Or maybe it’s just stronger every time I realize it. I don’t know for sure, but I do know that motherhood continues to surprise me with its fulfillment.

Never in my life (which has been somewhat short but very full) has anything been as fulfilling as motherhood. I don’t know why that keeps surprising me. I’ve grown up knowing that this would be the best thing I could do with my life. And yet, the ins and outs of it surprise me daily. Never have I been so challenged, learned so much, or been so happy as I am as a mother.

I’m not sure I would have believed someone telling me that my heart would practically burst with happiness when my son sings songs with me or when I hear his guttural laugh as I poke his little tummy. How does something so simple give me so much joy??

Why do some people bag on parenthood so much? Do they know what they’re missing? Or have I somehow tapped into something rare??

I don’t know, but whatever it is I love it! 🙂 God sure did know what He was doing when He made His plan for us. I suppose that goes without saying.


What do you think? Is her fulfillment in motherhood rare?

Speaking for myself, I know there are many days when I don’t really feel fulfilled as a mother. And honestly, I think much of the time it’s because I get bogged down in the minutiae and the work. The two examples my friend gives here, both of enjoying time with her son, are examples of the type of times when I feel most fulfilled—when I take a step back and just let myself enjoy the moment, without stressing about the vacuuming or the blogging.

I can also see clear ways that I can improve in this area (by worrying less about those other areas!). What do you think we can do to help ourselves feel fulfilled and enjoy time with our children more?

Categories
Faith

Why I “Dig” Jesus

So I’ve been tagged by Laura at OpinionMom to share 5 things I dig love about Jesus. I’ve been obsessing over this list because I want to get the ‘right’ five (as if my salvation or yours depends on this!). But since it doesn’t, I’ll just go with the first five that come to my mind and heart.

  1. He has graven me upon the palms of His hands; my walls are continually before Him (Isa. 49:16).
  2. I can do all things through Christ and then enabling power of His atonement—and more than once this week, I’ve had to pray just to make it out of bed in the morning.
  3. He was tempted in all points like as I am—He knows what I’m going through (but, y’know, without the whole sinning part; Heb 4:15).
  4. He is the great mediator, the intercessor, the only one who can reconcile my soul with God’s justice.
  5. He is the light, the life and the way, the perfect exemplar.

So, there are some rules about tagging five more people, but I’m not always sure that my blogging friends want to discuss their beliefs (and not every personal blog is the right forum for that kind of discussion).  Instead, feel free to share your five things (or one thing) in the comments or in your own post (just let me know about it).

Thanks!

Categories
Kids/Parenting Faith

Three Things for Hayden

I really didn’t intend for the June Group Writing Project to become a serious repository for the three most important things ever in your life. I figured most people would take a light-hearted approach, especially after the ever-so-serious topic for May, “Dear Children. . .” I was bowled over by how introspective and thought-provoking many (perhaps most) of the posts turned out.

And now I feel as though I should share the three things that I really want for Hayden. The things I worry about on nights when it’s too hot to sleep, when I see other women’s children alone in the world, when I am alone in a quiet house, not working.

Hayden, if ever you read this (and I’m rather confident you will, since nothing is ever lost on the Internet, and I have yet to throw away a computer), these are the three most important things I can tell you:

  1. Love God with all your heart, might, mind and strength. Keep your eye single to His glory. Do the best that you can—and sometimes, even better—and He will strengthen you in this life and make you more than you could have imagined. (To say nothing of the next life!)
  2. Love your future wife. Always be faithful to her, whomever she is, whatever she may be doing—starting now. Life your life to be worthy of her that when you finally meet her, you will be ready to marry her.
  3. O be wise; what can I say more? I know that you are young, and are not yet wise.  But many, many, many wise people have lived before us.  I will try to teach you the things which they have learned from sad experience, that you will not have to make the difficult, painful mistakes that so many of us make.  I cannot tell you all the things that may happen to you if you make poor choices, but I can tell you the most important things you can do in this life to make you and those around you truly happy.

Stay tuned for this afternoon’s announcement of the June Group Writing Project Winner!

Categories
Fulfillment Faith

Why fulfillment?

Why is MamaBlogga all about mom’s search for meaning, finding fulfillment in motherhood? There are lots of other ways to find fulfillment; can’t those tide a mother over until she’s done raising her kids and can get on with her life?

I suppose so. But I think that a “let me just get through this and then get on with my life” is a recipe for resentment. I should know—about every other week, I change my plans for the time when my all my kids will be in school, hopefully in about a decade. I’ll go get a PhD, I’ll speak at conferences, I’ll write a book—someday, someday, someday.

It’s a bit like living our lives according to a strict religious code, thinking, “If I can just do this incredibly hard, arduous task now, I’ll be happy in Heaven forever.” Yes, you will—but I believe that God wants us to be happy now, and His commandments are given to us to help us be happier.  (After all,  don’t you think we’ll be living those same commandments in Heaven?  Will we magically be happy doing something there that we resented doing here?)

Whether or not you believe as I do, you probably have (or want) children right now. I want every mother to be able to feel fulfillment and pride as a mother—now, not just in fifteen or twenty years when her children are grown, when they’re “accomplishments.”

We’re often told that this is impossible. The Harvard Business School’s model of success used to be: “Achievement.” We’re told that in motherhood, there are no achievements. There’s nothing you can put on a resume, get a bonus for or show off to your friends. (Okay, well, there’s potty training.)

If you are feeling this way, I want you to know that those people are wrong. Many of the things that count as “achievements” in this life—landing a contract, winning a case, even truly good and important things—will fade in significance more quickly than we expect. The Harvard Business School revised its model of success to include happiness, significance and legacy. Many will tell you that motherhood doesn’t provide these either. They are wrong.

There is nothing more significant you can do than to instill values into your children’s hearts. I know you want to do this—most of this month’s Group Writing Project entries have directly addressed or alluded to some kind of values, whether it be courtesy, family, self-worth or religious beliefs.

I won’t lie to you: it’s not easy. But it is worth it. One day, I hope and pray, I will see the people my children have become. I will be matriarch over a clan of children, children-in-law, grandchildren (and hopefully sisters, brothers-in-law, nieces, nephews and their posterity, if we live close enough). And even when our dozens of friends and family come all together, say, for my child’s wedding, I will only see a small portion of the good works our family will have wrought. That is significance, happiness and legacy.

But that’s “Heaven” (on Earth). While I look forward to that day, I don’t just have to live for that day, and neither do you.

Enjoy today. Be fulfilled today. One of the first things you have to do to be fulfilled is to recognize that what you do is significant.  Yes, even keeping the toddler out of the cat food.

Mothers matter.  Don’t let anyone ever tell you otherwise.  Mothers matter and you matter.

What else can I do to help you feel fulfilled?

Categories
Fulfillment Faith

The embodiment of womanhood

In a discussion this week, I referred to myself as “a woman and a mother,” in that order. A later speaker in the conversation described herself as half a dozen things, ending with “a mother and a WOMAN.”

I think she had them backwards.

In my opinion, motherhood is the fullest embodiment of womanhood. I was a woman before I was a mother, yes. But now that I am a mother, I believe I’m serving in the most important, fullest function that a woman can. I feel like I’m more of a woman now that I’m a mother. Motherhood magnifies me as an individual and a woman.

While for me, becoming a mother was a biological birth experience, I believe that this same feeling applies to all types of mothers. I’m not more of a woman because I was pregnant. I’m not more of a woman because of the biological changes my body underwent during and after pregnancy.

I would attribute this “magnified” feeling to how much my life has been enriched and my heart has grown since I’ve become a mother. And of course, there are my beliefs, which include that motherhood “is the highest, holiest service to be assumed by mankind.”

I’m not trying to say that a childless woman is “less of a woman.” I don’t think that. But I do feel that motherhood encompasses all that is womanhood and more. The calling of motherhood supersedes the role of womanhood, and certainly anything else I’ve done in my life. In fact, the real, highest definition of myself would be “wife and mother.” I don’t even have to mention being a “woman,” because I feel like that’s completely entailed (in the logical, linguistic sense of the word) by those higher, broader callings.

Do you feel like being a mother makes you more of a woman?


Updates: Hayden is doing better. He guzzled the Pedialyte and even ate some cheese and, later, green beans. He did whine the whole day for food, which is probably a good sign.

The ants are doing well, too. Trying vinegar, but it doesn’t look good so far.