Saturday, July 27, 2013

Leaning

Do you ever see a photo of yourself and feel like you're staring at a stranger?
Sometimes I wonder how it happens, how we're caught in a season of life and we think we'll be there forever...and then we flip through photos one day only to find that season is dead and gone.

We think it lasts forever but blast, forever is only what we groan for. The soul in us leans forward to grasp the thing just out of sight, just around the bend, just around the corner. It's never satisfied because the eternity in us is never satiated.

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Drooling idols.

When I became a stay at home mom, my world changed.

There was a certain level of a grief no one prepared me for, and no one talks about. I started to grieve my former life; my independence, my schedule, my money, my freedom. "Success" was redefined. A paycheck and a pat on the back at the end of my work week, followed by a TGIF dinner date with my husband evolved into 24/7 flat out hard work. Let's face it--there are no kudos for picking up toys, making dinner, dressing and changing (and unchanging) your little ones. You don't get applause for that--and you shouldn't, because basic care of a human being you created is your job.

So I threw myself into my new job.

If this was my new occupation, being a mother and stay at home housewife, I was going to be the best one ever. I read all the books and blogs, did fun crafts promoting all the right fine motor skills, started making bread from scratch, even taking up needlework (don't ask me how long I stuck with that) to somehow mold myself into this Mother of the Year--this modern Betty Crocker--with the apron and the fun games and never ending patience. I did a pretty darn good job of balancing everything, and was pretty proud of myself. Friends would start complimenting me with phrases like "Wow, how do you do it all?" or "You're my inspiration!" and more recently "She's like a Martha Stewart!" I preaned and shyly batted away these comments but I still wasn't satisfied. I was hounded with thoughts of inadequecy. My husband and kids were tucked into bed and I would stare at the slits of moonlight across the ceiling and think "Did I do a good job today? Was I enough?" If I lost my temper or if things weren't in their perfect and pristine order when my husband got home, I promised myself I would do better tomorrow. (Note: My husband always said I was an amazing mother and wife, and never once commented on a less-than-tidy room. But in my heart I felt like I had failed him.)

The days blended together.
Things got boring.
I was feeling under appreciated, more like a maid and a nanny than a beloved mother or cherished wife.
I was reading more mommy blogs than the Scriptures, which meant I was pouring myself out and nothing was pouring back in. 
 I struggled with my new life in my new role; what should my day look like? Why am I not satisfied? Should my kids be ________ (fill in the blank, ie "reading", "talking", etc) by now?

Slowly I started learning, through trial and error, that I'm the kind of person who needs rules and structure to feel accomplished. I needed a purpose and a plan to create my day, and grace to forgive myself if things were less than perfect (which was, frankly, every single day). I wrote out a housekeeping schedule. I started the Gimme Five Rules (5: books read to the kids, 4: chores, 3: movies/TV shows in a 24 hour period, 2: hours to myself, and 1: craft for the kids) which helped carve out some order in my life.

I still beat myself up if things don't go perfectly or if I'm still in my PJs at 3 pm, but after three years of parenting (still a rookie, ha!) I have learned that perfection has a price--and it's usually the price of missing out on a childhood.

But I wish, I wish, I wish someone would have taken me aside when I was pregnant with my eldest. I wish they would have made me hot tea with oatmeal cookies, looked me in the eyes and said this:

"Motherhood is a beautiful thing. Your world is more beautiful and more chaotic when you bring little ones inside it. You will be elated when your child says "Mama" or "I love you!" for the first time, and you will be wrecked beyond words when the little sinner inside them needs discipline. You'll grow closer to your husband from the miniature bond you created, but sometimes time will slip away from you and you'll struggle to see eachother as much--sometimes merely to pass eachother in the hallway. You may resent your child, even for a moment, and then be riddled with guilt for even thinking it. There are times you may not like your child. Days will be long, nights will be even longer, and you may have zombie days--or weeks--while your baby is teething, weaning, potty training, or reverse sleep cycling. Your friends may not understand your new life, and you may lose them for a while--maybe forever. Your children become your closest friends and the pulse of your life circles around them. The invisible but iron-clad string that connects you to them will grow even stronger through every sickness or set back. These days are hard, and your job is the most difficult one in the entire world. For a time, your entire being is completely immersed in the care and nurturing of your children, until one day....it won't be. This is your job now, and your role forever--but these days will pass. Love them, hug them, teach them and discipline them--show them the world and lead them to the Lord Jesus--but don't worship them. Don't idolize them because like everything else (money, career, marriage), they will disappoint you. Don't ever forget you're a child of the King, then a wife, then a mother. Enjoy these days but on the days that you don't, get an extra large cup of coffee, slip in Toy Story 3 and get comfy."