Posted in Celebration, Childhood, Family, Grandparenthood, motherhood, Thanks

Today Changed Your Life Forever

Dear Brand-Spanking-New Mama,

Today has changed your life forever. You will never be the same. Your beautiful baby girl has been born.

Feelings have bubbled to the surface that you didn’t even know existed, the very first being

LOVE unimaginable, unexplainable.

But I can promise you that won’t be the only one. You’ll be pummeled by ALL. THE. FEELINGS. every day for the rest of your life.

FEAR that your house will catch on fire or that no one will invite your new 5th grader to sit with them on the bus.

LONELINESS in the middle of a room full of other moms or in the middle of a sleepless night.

CONFUSION about how to feed your baby the right food or feed yourself the best information.

JOY over the first wobbly steps taken across the family room or the last confident steps taken across the graduation stage.

ANGER at the unfair teacher, your sassy toddler, her phone, your out-of-control self, the mean girl at lunch, every form of consuming media, the unhelpful doctor, on and on and on.

GUILT about not being enough or being too much.

SADNESS when the bus pulls away with your kindergartener or when your teen pushes you away, leaving you a heap on his bedroom floor.

THANKFUL for the smile laced across your middle-schooler’s face at the Holiday Chorus concert or the smile on your bride-daughter’s face as she dances with her groom.

28 years later, you will be in the middle of a three-way kiss between your baby and her baby, and that very first feeling,

LOVE, unimaginable, unexplainable,

will swallow up all the others, multiplying itself once again, which you never thought possible.

From my heart to yours,

Filled-to-the-brim-with-love, Old Mama

 

 

Posted in Faith, Family, Mental Health, motherhood

Ungrace (#NOT living from this place)

√ TELL ME SOMETHING YOU LIKE ABOUT ME
√ SEND ME A THANK YOU TEXT OR NOTE
√ SAY “I GET WHY YOU FEEL THIS WAY” WHEN I’M SPEWING THE LATEST “UGH” LIFE MOMENT
√ CELEBRATE MY BIRTHDAY WITH SPEECHES, POEMS, CHEESY SONGS ABOUT WHY YOU LOVE ME
√ LET ME BE THE CENTER OF ATTENTION

Enter Little Me.

I love being cheered for when I got an “Excellent Work” on my math assignment.
I love being clapped for on the sideline at Field Day.
I love being praised for singing a solo in the school play.

It spoke to my soul that what I was good, approved of, and I should do more of the same.
It fed the very normal parts of me that longed to be liked and enjoyed by others.
It saturated this “words of affirmation” girl with a bucket full of love.

Enter Bigger Me.

This beautiful, God-given love language of mine twisted into something called UNGRACE, the view that I HAD to perform in order to be accepted, wanted and loved.
Praise for accomplishing
 morphed into earning the approval and love of those in my path.

I believed if I did not do these things, I deserved nothing and should actually be punished.

No wonder I strived so hard.
Many times, I wanted to just give up because it was too hard.
It seemed never enough.
The bar was too high, always just beyond my reach!

Enter Motherhood.

No one cheered when I was up in the middle of the night with my newborn.
No one clapped when I painstakingly folded the laundry every single day.
No one praised me for driving to
(78,453) after-school activities.

I wasn’t sure if I was doing a good job, approved of, or even liked.

Sometimes I was told (hold your breath) that I wasn’t doing a good job by the wonderful children I bore from my very loins (insert sarcastic emoji here).
I wondered if anyone knew what I was doing at all, or even cared.
I felt unnoticed and under-appreciated.

Said love bucket barely had enough water in it to wash my face.

Other times, I completely blew it as a mom.

I yelled in frustration when I knew it only made things worse.
I argued back to a teenager (imagine that!), escalating the problem instead of bringing calm.
I used guilt and fear words to get my kids to do what I wanted.

It was not a pretty picture.  I didn’t even like or approve of myself, let alone what others might think if they knew.

Aforementioned love bucket drained to the place of “I still think I might see faded wet stains on the bottom.”

Enter God.

I couldn’t hide any of the good or bad from Him.
Maybe He wasn’t happy enough when I was doing good.
Maybe He was angry when I was failing.

What was I to do?

First choice: get on the hamster wheel of “trying harder.”

Carry UNGRACE with me everywhere. 

Be the classroom mom.
Get a “thank you” from the teacher.

Have an “over-the-top” Victorian Tea birthday party for my 13 year-old.
Receive a “hug” from my teen.

Make cookies for every high school basketball game.
Get acknowledged at the end-of-the-year awards banquet by my 6’5″ son. 

DO.
GET LOVE.
DO MORE.
GET LOVE.
OUTDO MYSELF AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN.

The loop viciously perpetuated and I was an absolute slave to it, never finding a way off the “round-and-round-it-goes-where-it-stops-nobody-knows.”

Enter Exhaustion. Thirst. Depletion.

It wasn’t working.
I was a wreck.
I finally wanted to jump right off the never-ending, life-crushing shiny wheel.

But how???

Enter people just like me.

Authors.
Friends.
Preachers.
My husband.
Counselors (YUP!  Had to go to one of those!)
#EVENMYKIDS

Healing “words of affirmation” began to shatter the lie I was living under.
They revealed the truth of grace to me.
Instead of running frantically, I began to walk, able to catch glimpses outside the cage.

I found out that grace is fundamentally unfair.
Grace says love does not have to be earned.
Grace tells me I don’t have to gain approval to receive it.

I could keep going “round-and-round” for false approval and supposed love, the kind I had manufactured by doing and doing.

BUT I DIDN’T HAVE TO.

I could receive true approval and sincere love, the kind where I don’t have to do anything to get more or less of it.

I could get off the hamster wheel.
Maybe I could even live outside the confines of the cage.

Re-Enter God.

I found out He is the ultimate source of GRACE.
He gives it willingly.
In fact, He longs to pour it into my hole-in-the-bottom bucket.

There’s nothing I can do to make Him love me more OR less.

HE IS FULL OF GRACE!  OVERFLOWINGLY FULL!  He’s got more than enough.

GUSH.

My love bucket fills.  And quickly.

Of course, there is still a hole in the bottom.

That’s just part of being a person.

I need GRACE every moment.  Every day.  All the time.

But it never runs out.
It flows freely, a never-ending stream that keeps my bucket full.
The hole in the bottom is no match for the FREE and UNEARNED approval and love that He keeps pouring out.

Exit UNGRACE.

Enter getting off the wheel and out of the cage.

Posted in Family, motherhood

My House Empty but My Heart Full (to my fellow ordinary moms)

“Yes, please get a new cup every time you get a drink of water.”  (No Mom Ever)

I lie alone in my bed on a very normal Wednesday night at 11 pm here in our sleepy little town.  My husband, the heart of my heart, is at his apartment 350 miles away, where he works three days a week.  Our oldest is hopefully sleeping soundly snug next to her husband with her baby boy a few short steps away in his crib (praying he is not sleeping like a baby, but more like a teenager) over two hours away.  Our blond hair, blue-eyed first-born son, is probably nodding off in his apartment after a really long day working.  My away-at-college senior might just be tackling a paper he has procrastinated writing.  My baby, 19 year old curly-headed musician, is the farthest away, probably jamming away with friends on guitars, keyboards and microphones.  My house is empty and my heart is scattered all over the East Coast.

Only eight short years ago, life was completely different.  On those weekday nights, after showers were taken, toilets were flushed, teeth were brushed, homework was done, video-game playing came to a close, hugs were given, “I love yous” were said, all five of these people who my soul loves lay their heads on pillows within 20 feet of my own.  My house was full and my heart was in one place at one kitchen table under one roof.

Yet tonight, as I lie in my very empty house, and although my heart is scattered, it is not empty.  My heart is FULL.  Full because on the very ordinary day, I have been loved by all the incredible people I shared the better part of my life with in one place at one kitchen table under one roof.

“Thanks, Mom, for all you did for us today.”  (phone call from oldest as she was finishing up dinner with her new family after I had spent time caring for her baby and doing their laundry)

“See you this weekend, Mom.” (reminder from third-born about Friday night)

“Shalom to you too, beautiful wife.” (text from hubby as he heads to dreamland after our discussion about what peace really means)

“Love you too, Mom.” (text from son in response to our discussion about us getting him a puppy for his birthday)

Just as I cuddle up under my covers and am about to turn off the light, I receive one last “ding” on my laptop.  It is the last of the bunch, our “Bug,” as she is known in these parts.  And it is for no reason at all.

Screen Shot 2018-10-24 at 11.42.31 PM


Lest you get some crazy notion from all this loveliness that this is how it’s always been or always is even now, let me set the record straight.  Under this one roof at one kitchen table in one place, we had our moments.  Fights over the huge and minuscule (there was even one earlier this week and it was a doozy).  Broken rules and boundaries.  Critical spirits and hurt feelings.   Addictions and mental illness.  Slammed doors and silent treatments.  Sickness and sadness.  Harsh words and ignorance.  All the things that make up normal FULL family life.

But as today reminds me, this is NOT all there was or is now.  Under this one roof at one kitchen table in one place, there were also “I’m sorrys” and “I forgive yous.”  Respect and authenticity.  Forgiveness and encouragement.  Freedom and healing.  Open hearts and honest conversations.  Health and joy.  Kind words and understanding.  All the things that make up normal FULL family life.

So, Fellow Ordinary Moms and Wives who are…

STILL UNDER ONE ROOF:

I see you.  I was you.  It’s hard.  Look up, Sweet Mama.  Keep up the good work.  Hang in there.  You are amazing.  The days are long, but the years are short.  You’ve got this.  Your family is normal.  These people you love, but are ready to kill at any given moment, are worth every ounce of love you can muster and are pouring out and into them.  They will make it.  You will make it.   You will never regret it.  It may seem like there’s no end in sight, and your stuff feels huge (AND IT IS), but it will (AND THEY WILL) be okay and even possibly wonderful.  Never forget this one truth:  LOVE IS ALWAYS THE RIGHT DECISION!

ALONE IN YOUR BED:

I see you.  I am you.  It’s hard.  Look up, Sweet Mama.  Our hearts are scattered, yet they reach more places.  Our love that we gave and are continuing to pour out is multiplied beyond measure.  Hang in there.  It will feel sad some days.  It does for me too.  I miss those times under one roof at one table in one place.  But it will (AND WE WILL) be okay and even possibly wonderful.   Even though the end is in plain view (and possibly in the rear view), we must keep loving and giving ourselves to our people.  Even though our houses are empty, our hearts can be full.  Never forget this one truth:  LOVE IS ALWAYS THE RIGHT DECISION!

(One heart-wrenching note: for those of you who have lost children, I can’t even imagine.  Your heart has been shattered beyond belief.  It’s hard for me to speak to you because I don’t understand.  I really don’t.  But I do know that the love you showed them while they were here is not wasted.  It’s continuing to multiply over and over again because love is like that.  You loved them with your whole heart.  In turn, they loved others with theirs.  That’s what this world needs and you have given it freely and sacrificially.  Thank you for taking that risk we all are taking as we love our children with our fierce mom love.  I’m so sorry, Sweet Mama.   My heart is with you and all us moms collectively salute you and hug you with our hearts.)


When our daughter became pregnant with our precious grandson, I was giddy.  Not because she was going to produce a grandchild to me, even though that’s a lot of fun, but because she was going to join the massive, never-ending “Mom’s Club” that I am a part of.  There’s nothing like it.  We understand parts of each other that no one else does.  We take a gigantic risk loving this human being, but we can’t help ourselves.  We give each other that look (maybe of desperation or joy) across the room and the other mom sees our hearts behind our eyes.  There’s nothing like it.   We turn to each other in times of great heartache and are comforted.   When we can’t speak with our mouths because the joy or the pain is too deep, we receive unspoken affirmation through hugs from each other.   There’s nothing like it.

So Sweet Mama, thank you for loving.  Thank you for sharing your heart with another.  Thank you for making your little world a much more beautiful and safe place.   You’ve got this!  And together, we’ve got this in spades!