Thursday, August 29, 2013

I LOVE This!

To the Unwashed Masses of Mothers

Lea Grover

Lea Grover

Lea is a writer and toddler-wrangler living on Chicago's South Side. When she isn't cultivating an impressive dust bunny collection she waxes philosophic about raising interfaith children, life after cancer, and vegetarian cooking. In her free time you can find her writing as Becoming SuperMommy, working on her manuscript, singing opera to her littles, or smeared to the elbow in Townsend pastels.
mommy

Dear Mom,

I’ve seen you around. I’ve seen you screaming at your kids in public, I’ve seen you ignoring them at the playground, I’ve seen you unshowered and wearing last night’s pajama pants at preschool drop-off. I’ve seen you begging your children, bribing them, threatening them. I’ve seen you shouting back and forth with your husband, with your mom, with the police officer at the crosswalk.

I’ve seen you running around with your kids, getting dirty and occasionally swearing audibly when you bang a knee. I’ve seen you sharing a milkshake with a manic four year old. I’ve seen you wiping your kids’ boogers with your bare palm, and then smearing them on the back of your jeans. I’ve seen you carry your toddler flopped over the crook of your arm while chasing a runaway ball.

I’ve also seen you gritting your teeth while your kid screamed at you for making him practice piano, or soccer, or basket weaving, or whatever it was. I’ve seen you close your eyes and breathe slowly after finding a gallon of milk dumped into your trunk. I’ve seen you crying into the sink while you desperately scrub crayon off your best designer purse. I’ve seen you pacing in front of the house.

I’ve seen you at the hospital waiting room. I’ve seen you at the pharmacy counter. I’ve seen you looking tired, and frightened.

I’ve seen a lot of you, actually. I see you every single day.

I don’t know if you planned to be a parent or not. If you always knew from your earliest years that you wanted to bring children into the world, to tend to them, or if motherhood was thrust upon you unexpectedly. I don’t know if it meets your expectations, or if you spent your first days as a mom terrified that you would never feel what you imagined “motherly love” would feel like for your child. I don’t know if you struggled with infertility, or with pregnancy loss, or with a traumatic birth. I don’t know if you created your child with your body, or created your family by welcoming your child into it.

But I know a lot about you.

I know that you didn’t get everything that you wanted. I know that you got a wealth of things you never knew you wanted until they were there in front of you. I know that you don’t believe that you’re doing your best, that you think you can do better. I know you are doing better than you think.

I know that when you look at your child, your children, you see yourself. And I know that you don’t, that you see a stranger who can’t understand why the small details of childhood that were so important to you are a bother to this small person who resembles you.

I know that you want to throw a lamp at your teenager’s head sometimes. I know you want to toss your three year old out the window once in a while.

I know that some nights, once it’s finally quiet, you curl up in bed and cry. I know that sometimes, you don’t, even though your heart is breaking with exhaustion and the weight of crushed expectations.

I know that some days are so hard that all you want is for them to end, and then at bedtime your children hug you and kiss you and tell you how much they love you and want to be like you, and you wish the day could last forever.

But it never does. The day always ends, and the next day brings new challenges. Fevers, heartbreak, art projects, new friends, new pets, new fights. And every day you do what you need to do.

You take care of things, because that’s your job. You go to work, or you fill up the crock pot, or you climb into the garden, or strap the baby to your back and pull out the vacuum cleaner.

You drop everything you’re doing to moderate an argument over who’s turn it is to use a specific marker, or to kiss a boo-boo, or to have a conversation about what color lipstick Pinocchio’s mommy wears.

I know that you have tickle fights in blanket forts, and that you have the words to at least eight different picture books memorized. I’ve heard that you dance like a wild woman when it’s just you and them. That you have no shame about farting or belching in their presence, that you make up goofy songs about peas and potatoes and cheese.

I know that an hour past bedtime, you drop what you’re doing and trim the fingernail that your three year old insists is keeping her up. I know that you stop cleaning dishes because your kids insist you need to join their tea party. I know you fed your kids PBandJ for four days straight when you had the flu. I know that you eat leftover crusts over the sink while your kids watch Super Why.

I know you didn’t expect most of this. I know you didn’t anticipate loving somebody so intensely, or loathing your post-baby body so much, or being so tired, or being the mom you’ve turned out to be.

You thought you had it figured out. Or you were blind and terrified. You hired the perfect nanny. Or you quit your job and learned to assemble flat packed baby furniture. You get confused by the conflict of feeling like nothing has changed since you were free and unfettered by children, and looking back on the choices you made as though an impostor was wearing your skin.

You’re not a perfect mom. No matter how you try, no matter what you do. You will never be a perfect mom.

And maybe that haunts you. Or maybe you’ve made peace with it. Or maybe it was never a problem to begin with.

No matter how much you do, there is always more. No matter how little you do, when the day is over your children are still loved. They still smile at you, believing you have magical powers to fix almost anything. No matter what happened at work, or at school, or in play group, you have still done everything in your power to ensure that the next morning will dawn and your children will be as happy, healthy, and wise as could possibly be hoped.

There’s an old Yiddish saying, “There is one perfect child in the world, and every mother has it.”

Unfortunately, there are no perfect parents. Your kids will grow up determined to be different than you. They will grow up certain that they won’t make their kids take piano lessons, or they’ll be more lenient, or more strict, or have more kids, or have fewer, or have none at all.

No matter how far from perfect you are, you are better than you think.

Someday your kids will be running around like crazy people at synagogue and concuss themselves on the handicapped rail, and somebody will still walk up and tell you what a beautiful family you have. You’ll be at the park and your kids will be covered in mud and jam up to the elbows, smearing your car with that sugary cement, and a pregnant lady will stop and smile at you wistfully.

No matter how many doubts you might have, you never need doubt this one thing: You are definitely not perfect.

And that’s good. Because really, neither is your child. And that means nobody can care for them the way you can, with the wealth of your understanding and your experience. Nobody knows what your child’s squall means, or what their jokes mean, or why they are crying, better than you do.

And since no mother is perfect, chances are you are caught in a two billion way tie for Best Mom in the World.

Congratulations, Best Mom in the World. You’re not perfect.

You’re as good as anybody can get.

With love,

Me

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Do I Have Something On My Face?

Apparently she wanted some Ovaltine.  Straight from the can. 

A Tale of Two Parks

 The week before school started Trisha and I got the kids together to do something before school started.  We were going to go to the pool but, the day we decided to do it was really chilly.  So instead we met in Ft. Madison and took the kids to a couple of different parks.  
First we went to to the Riverfront park.  We had a picnic lunch ready to go too!  The kids were thrilled when a train came by!!  It was really close and loud!


 Eden is very leery of loud noises.  So, she came back to the shelter house and hung out there while the train passed.  But, other than that, she was ON THE RUN!  

 I love this because Cullen is standing like a little old man.  

 He and Chase were both VERY excited for the trains!



 Grandma Kelley was in Ft. Madison too with Owen.  So, she stopped by to have lunch with us and then left Owen to play while she finished up with her Mom and Dad at the hospital. 

After rodeo park we were going to go to the Eagle's Nest park.  It is a really unique wooden park at one of the schools in Ft. Madison.  It has so many little nooks and crannies it is kinda like a maze!  I hadn't been there since I was a teenager.  Sadly, when we drove there, it was gone and a new "regular" playground was in its place.  Also, school was in session so we couldn't play there anyway. Bummer!  So we went to the Old Settlers park.  The boys ran straight for this dome climb on thing. They asked to have their picture taken together at the top of the climby thingy.

 Cullen really liked the teeter totter.  I thought it was cute that he ran up to me and told me he was having fun on the see-saw!  I don't know who told him it was a see-saw because we call them teeter totters, lol! 

 Chase was posing for his mom to take a picture.

 Cullen would not come stand on these things with everyone else but, I think the pic turned out super duper.


 Deep Thoughts with Liam Kelley

 Owen on the elephant.

 Chasers cheesin'.

 Eden did this most of the time.  She would push it out into the street and laugh and laugh when I chased after her and told her NO!  Oh, she is a naughty little girl sometimes! 

 Eden on the elephant.


I love Owen's face in this one!! LOL!  They had a lot of fun all playing together at the park!

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Bahahahaha!


Best Days from the Farmers' Almanac

Best Days from the Farmers' Almanac


This is so cool.  

The “Days of Shivery” are Back! Read Our 2014 Forecast!

The “Days of Shivery” are Back! Read Our 2014 Forecast!


Looks like we need to take advantage of what we have left of summer!  Winter is coming!  (Game of Thrones reference!)  

End of Summer Playing

 This summer has been pretty mild really.  In terms of temperature.  So many days that should have been swimmable that were just too chilly.  Weird.  


 I'm glad that we finally got our swing set.  It actually has gotten used even more than I had imagined! Yay!  Sometimes I sneak out there by myself and hide in the clubhouse just to get a few seconds to myself.  I can think there or cry if I want to, haha!  

Eden Rose still loves her house so much.  She plays in there the most.  I think we may get her a bigger one too.  She will take Woody and Jessie out there and play house.  It is the cutest.  No wait, SHE is the cutest!! :)

Dumb.

I spent a hundred some odd dollars on an outfit for Jeremy's cousin's wedding.  We got there twenty minutes late, stood at the back and caught the kiss, chased kids around like morons for twenty more minutes, took one family pic without all the kids in it, and left.  I imagined wearing it longer and in front of more people....and dancing.  Nope.  FML. 

Every school in the area is pissing me off.  Pretty much every person I know is pissing me off.  I love how we get the raw end of the deal every single time.  Why can't something just go the way I want it to!??!  Asher and Cullen are doing super at Nauvoo school.  But, the powers that be may eff it all up.  Maybe I will just keep both of them at home with me. 

I'm sick and tired of people right now.  Friends, family, walmart checkers, people I meet on the street, drivers on the road, etc.  EVERYONE.  And why I am the scapegoat of so many people is beyond me.  Ugh. 

So, new goal.  If neither Nauvoo or Carthage is working out for our family then I think it may be time to seek elsewhere.  I'm thinking something drastic needs to happen.  Now, for the rest of my Sunday, I will seek only the positive and focus all my energies on a new future for our family.  This state of limbo is wearing on us. 

Ummmmm


Fo' Shizzle


Focus


Respect

 

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Yerp.


For My Dad


My Tiny Rant

I'm gonna lose my marbles and take a much needed vacation to the mental ward after this summer.  Good Lord, can something just go my way for once in my life?  I just wanna lay down and quit so bad.  Ugh.  So, today I am going to try putting good vibes out into the universe and hoping against hope that the karma train will be pulling into my station. 

Friday, August 23, 2013

Garden Stuff

I have about 10 zucchini on my kitchen counter.  I did a super quick check of the garden just now and I have at least 12 more to pick right now.  I have been pinning zucchini recipes right and left.  Last night we had zucchini tots.  I will post the recipe later.  I have a ton of pumpkins growing too!  I love to think of the money saved on pumpkins this Halloween!! 

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Cullen

Cullen got in the full day pre-K in Nauvoo!!!  YAY!! 
 I am so excited!! There were only 2 openings and 10 kids wanted the spot!! This is awesome!

My Thoughts This Morning

Oh my goodness, whew!  I think I might be able to relax for ten minutes or so today.  I am exhausted both physically and mentally.  So darn tired.  Today we got everyone up and out the door on time with everything they need (I think).  I took Cullen and Eden with me to Nauvoo to drop Asher off at school.  Jeremy got Tristan, Cedric, and Liam to school here in Carthage.  I hope they all have a super day!  It is always nerve wracking for me to send them to school.  Cullen is really excited to start school tomorrow too!! I hope and pray that he gets into the full day program in Nauvoo.  If not, it is half days here in Carthage. 
I am going to try to find a nice jogging stroller that I can take Eden running with me after I get the boys in school each day.  I think she will like it and I will too.  I can do that until it gets really cold and then I  may use the gym at the YMCA once we get our membership.  Speaking of which the swimming lessons start there in late September I believe and that will something for the kids to look forward to.  Today is Jeremy's birthday!!  So, I need to think of things to do. 

Monday, August 19, 2013

This Day

This day has been one of the worst in a long time for me.  Good grief.  Gah!!  Tomorrow WILL be better!!

School


In honor of how I feel about school.  These are not signs of intelligence or intellect, these are the signs of drones. 

My Embarrassing Story

Here is a nice story.
Yesterday I was rushing to get to a bridal shower on time.  I knew I was cutting it close but, wanted to quickly take the car through the drive thru car wash because it was really dusty.  I pulled in to the automatic car wash and proceeded to select the type of car wash that I wanted when my car sputtered and died.  Hmm, that is weird.  So, I tried re-starting it. Nope.  It was our new Aveo and I don't quite know the gas limits yet (it was on the red line with the E next to it) and apparently I had run right out of gas....in the flippin' car wash line.  Ugh.  I called Jeremy and had him toss Eden in the Expedition and tell Tristan to watch everyone else.  Then he could bring some gas to me.  In the meantime, I had to slither out of the car because I had pulled up close to the car wash selection thingy, and tell the person behind me that I had run out of gas and had to wait for my hubby.  They left.  So, Jeremy got there and put a tiny bit of gas in it.  Then he tells me to go ahead through the car wash.  I said no, he said yes, I went through the dang car wash.  But, he waited on the other side of it for me just in case I sputtered out again.  Well, the car didn't die but, I did get stuck in the car wash.  Yes, you heard me right.  I got stuck in the frickety-frackin' car wash.  The wheels were just spinning and started to smoke!  I couldn't believe it!! And by this time there is a line of cars waiting behind me.  SMH.  So dang embarrassing!  Jeremy hopped out of the Expedition and walked over to me and told me which way to turn the wheels so that they would catch on something and let me out.  After a few tries, I was free.  Then I had to make it to the gas station...which I did.  Thank goodness!  Jeremy came to the station and filled the car up for me because he knew I was flustered and annoyed. I love him.  And finally, I got to go to the bridal shower. whew.

Sunday, August 18, 2013

A Good Laugh


Jeremy and I laughed until our stomachs hurt when we saw this.  Like full on, couldn't breathe, laughing.  It was amazing.  And you have to admit, that is pretty dang funny!  BAhahahaha!!

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Don't Worry

Oh my goodness, completely insane today!  This is the final push to the party, another birthday party to attend, school registration actually completely and decided, backpacks packed and organized, four (yes, I said FOUR) school open houses, a bridal shower, cleaning the house, cooking food, etc. etc.  AND I get a phone call this morning for the ultrasound for Asher to be scheduled and of course the one time the actually get us in quickly and it's tomorrow at 1:30pm!!!  Good grief.  If I am slightly moody or acting strange....don't worry.  I am secure in my knowledge that the insanity I experience will only be temporary.  If I happen to lash out, please ignore it!! lol!!

Also, this week I am getting zucchini like CRAZY!! Next week i am thinking about canning some zucchini marmalade and hot pepper jelly.  Anyone up for helping out?!!?  You can take some of the loot home!!
'

update...two hours later
I cannot mentally take anymore wet spots.  And by wet spots I mean water, juice, pee, whatever they can think of...as long as it is wet.  Eden has taken to taking bottles of water and dumping them anywhere and everywhere.  Today alone she has already dumped one full bottle of water all over the love seat.  Just now she dumped two whole bottles of water all over my kitchen floor.

here are some texts I have sent Jeremy in the last week:

* someone just flat out peed on the effing bathroom floor. Didn't even get close to the toilet. my shoes freaking slid in it and i sailed across the floor. A HUGE freaking puddle. How do people do that and just freaking leave it there for someone else. You have to really hate a person to do that. FML.

** well, Eden just took off full speed, barefoot down the middle of the street. And kept running from me and laughing. I was barefoot and couldn't keep up. Exhausting and embarrassing.

 ***Eden has #1-drug a completely soaking wet towel (after sitting in the pool with it) all over the house so that we had to use four big towels to get it all up. #2-took two full waters and dumped them all over the floor and back of the couch. #3-went upstairs to Liam's bed, climbed up on it and dumped three full bottles of water all over herself and Liam's bed and floor. If one more person yells or complains in my ear.......

So, as you can see, this happens often.  And this is just the times I texted Jeremy!  I get over it pretty quickly and when I think about it afterwards it's never a big deal.  But, in the moment, when I am trying to get other things done, it is the most annoying thing ever! 

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

When I Am Gone


The Clothesline

Cedric found a can of white spray paint one day and wandered outside with it.  Soon he came back and asked if he could paint the clothesline.  Sure thing!  He ran out of spray paint so I sent him to Dollar General with Liam to get some more.  They came back a few minutes later saying that they couldn't buy spray paint because they were not 18.  I didn't even think about that.  I called Jeremy and had him swing by DG and drop it by the house.  Cedric finished and was pretty pleased with his finished product!  I love it too!! Thanks, Cedric!

How Schools Kill Creativity




I have posted this video before, I thought.  But, I don't know when or where.  It is awesome. Seriously one of the best ever!!  Twenty minutes long and WELL WORTH IT!

Monday, August 12, 2013

Honesty


BAhaha!

This is how I feel this morning.  Yep.  My kind of humor! :)

ADHD Symptoms In Women

I keep telling Jeremy that Asher is a lot like me.  I remember being his age and acting a lot like him.  I am positive that if I went to the doctor I would be diagnosed as ADHD/ADD.  I have many of the common symptoms.  This morning I found this list of other symptoms.  Good grief I have all but, like two or three.  Sheesh.  But, I think it is something that you can grow out of and/or learn to cope with.  Baby steps. 

Common Symptoms of ADD and ADHD in Women

By Terry Matlen


Not all ADHD presents the same. Some women are hyperactive; others are sluggish. Some love having a lot of commotion and stimuli in their lives; others need to frequently retreat to a quiet space to recharge.
Consider the list of symptoms below that are not often listed in the ADD literature but which are commonly described by women with ADHD. Is it any wonder that your daily activities can be so overwhelming?
  • Hypersensitivity to noise, touch, smell; Women with small children are often overwhelmed by the constant interruptions, the noise level and commotion at home
  • Feelings of low self-worth; Women may feel they should be able to “do it all” and feel defeated when they can’t keep up. Juggling parenting and work responsibilities can simply be overwhelming
  • Hypersensitivity to criticism; Again, high expectations since childhood of being a “good girl” can make women with ADHD more vulnerable to these sensitivities
  • Poor sense of time, often running late
  • Being emotionally charged and easily upset; This is exacerbated during hormonal changes
  • Starting projects but seeming unable to finish them; Do you have piles of empty photo books? Heaps of unfinished sewing projects?
  • Taking on too much; On top of work and parenting, there is often the need for women to take on even more, like volunteering, helping out with school-related functions, making meals from scratch, etc.
  • Difficulty remembering names; This often gets worse before, during and after menopause
  • Saying things without thinking, often hurting others' feelings
  • Appearing self-absorbed
  • Poor math and/or writing skills 
  • Seeming to not want to hear what others are saying; This is especially difficult for women, who often want to connect socially, but have difficulty doing so 
  • Engaging in addictive behaviors: shopping, TV (soaps!) and eating are commonly seen.
  • Problems with word retrieval; again, this is often worse during menopause 
  • Poor handwriting; an embarrassing issue - society seems more accepting of poor penmanship in men
  • Difficulty with boring, repetitive tasks, such as laundry and other housekeeping chores 
  • Spending time ruminating
  • Difficulty making decisions; Grocery shopping is often painful, with all the choices available in stores today
  • Clumsiness and poor coordination
  • Tiring easily, or conversely, difficulty sitting still
  • Difficulty falling asleep and difficulty waking up the next morning; Again, made worse during menopause

The Week Before

This week is going to be crazy busy.  Like bonkers.  Deep cleansing breath, Colista.  We are heading into birthday season.  And back to school season.  And land of a thousand things to do season.  It'll be alright.  I'm sure it will. I just hope it doesn't rain on the day of our big birthday luau.  I don't know what we will do if it rains. 

Sunday, August 11, 2013

Gladiolas


Well, my gladiolas finally started to bloom and the colors are appealing but the stalks seem to be tipping over...or reaching for something.  I am pretty sure I didn't plant the right flowers in my new flower bed this year.  I thought it was full sun and it's not, darn it. 

More Of My Garden

 I went outside and took a picture on Friday after I blogged about my garden.  Everything is huge and abundant!!  My pumpkins and zucchini are invading the watermelons territory so next year I need to remember to give them more space!  I have a ton of zucchini blooming and growing right now so I think in the next week or two I will have a big overstock of it. 

 My tomatoes. So far only a few green ones but the plants smell really good so I am hoping that is a good sign. 

 My three pepper plants are stuck in between my tomatoes and my zucchini so I think they are losing out.  They look so tiny.  

 The watermelon have more room to grow on this side of the garden because my first mound of pumpkins didn't take on this side.  

This is the fire pit pumpkins.  They were growing great until Tony's guys came one day and picked the whole plant up and threw it in the fire pit.  I was SO annoyed.  I went outside and layed it all back out again but, I think the damage is done.  The leaves are turning brown and falling off, the stem part of the vine is brown and decaying, and the baby pumpkins are withering up and falling off.  Well, at least I have two pumpkins that grew pretty big.  I am going to try to save the plant but, if it gets worse I am taking it out and using the fire pit again.

To Moms of One or Two Children

 Short Stop Blog

Above is the link to the actual blog or read it below. 

 Wonderful post!!

 

To Moms of One or Two Children

How do you do it?

I've never counted, but I imagine the number of times I've been asked that question by Moms with one or two children is somewhere in the hundreds. I have five children, and judging by the look on the tired and weary faces that pose the question, that number seems simply impossible.

How do you do it?

Those are five loaded words. I suppose because the "it" behind that question is different for everyone.

How do you care for five little people?
How do you operate on little sleep?
How do you keep them safe?
How do you find time to do the laundry?
How do you afford them?
How do you keep from losing your ever-loving mind?

Mommas of one and two children - I understand every one of these questions. And, I understand just where you're coming from.

There are some things I want you to know about me. About children. About this journey through motherhood that we're both on.

If no one has ever told you...

1. You are maxed out - emotionally and physically - at the number of children you currently have. When I had my two-month old baby Jack, I sat on the edge of my bed and cried like a toddler who dropped her brand new ice cream cone because I thought my life was over. O-VER! This baby child, my supposed dream come true, wanted to wake up in the middle of the night and feed off of me, and all I wanted was to sleep. Baby "Not What I'd Read" would sleep, sleep, sleep all morning while I did dishes and caught up on laundry, but NOOOOOOO way I was gettin' a nap in the afternoon when all of that was finished.

The first time I went to Target with him, I took so much gear with me (I took my Boppy, people), that after I loaded up the cart with him and my gear, I couldn't buy anything because nothing fit.

I was completely overwhelmed. And, then he grew into a mobile baby and I thought it would be a good idea to get pregnant again so that while he was ripping everything out of the cabinets, bleeding from the mouth from playing bumper cars with the coffee table, eating the sofa, crawling the stairs to plummet to his demise, and licking the electrical outlets, I could also be barfing.

And, he still didn't sleep.

And, then his brother arrived. Eighteen months after he was born. And, I had no idea how people could possibly care for two children. Who are these LUNATICS who have a ton of children? How on earth am I supposed to nurse a newborn, and keep my maniac toddler from imminent death?

I was maxed out. It was one of the hardest times of my life - caring for one and then eighteen months later, two of them.

Moms of one and two children - You are doing HARD work. It is overwhelming and completely exhausting and figuring it all out is some of the most physically, mentally, emotionally demanding, and heart-wrenching work you will ever do. I know you are maxed out - in every way. And, I tell you this, not as someone who is patting you on the back and looking at you with condescending pity, but as someone who KNOWS how hard you are working and how taxing this season is on you. But, there is hope. It does get easier. Not because a light bulb goes off one day and you figure it all out.

But, because...

2. You will find your way. Your way. Not your Mom's way. Not Granny's way. Not pushy Aunt Bertie's way.

Your way.

What worked for your mom, Granny, and Aunt Bertie may simply not work for you. I LOVE hearing the wisdom and experiences from the older women in my life, but I HAVE to sift through their advice and experiences and choices to find what really helps me and what doesn't. Not only are children all different, but mothers are different. We tick and tock to different beats - some of us slower and some on hyperspeed, some on schedules and some just wingin' it. (I'm the latter, Lord help me.) As you get to know your children and build your home life, you will find what works for you. You will. And, letting go of the expectations of others is a BIG part of that. Pull what works for you. Respectfully let go of the rest.

This applies to friendships as well. Do you know who my best friends are? The ones that I lean on and trust and cry to and share with? They are my friends who insist, along with me, that there is no one way to do something. I have a very difficult time developing and maintaining friendships with people who have found THE ONE AND ONLY WAY to do something.

"OMG, you gave him PEANUT BUTTER at TEN MONTHS?"
"You don't have a laundry day???"
"Three year-olds should never still be in diapers."

No. We cannot be friends. Not close friends. Not cry on your shoulder friends.

As you find your way, quick-steppin' to a groove with those babies dancin' along with you, I've got some really, really, really good news...

3. It gets easier. If you let God get bigger.

I now have five children. And, I'm maxed out. Totally maxed out. Just like I was when I had one. And two and three and four.

But, mothering is easier for me now than it used to be. For one reason:

I need God more.

I need Him in the morning. At noon. And at night. I need Him to wipe my tears when my baby won't let me sleep at night. I need Him to calm my heart when I'm changing bed sheets at 2am. I need Him to keep my children safe because I only have two hands and one set of eyes and crossing a parking lot means holding on tight but it also means letting go of "I can do this, I can do this" and trading it for "God, You are with me and You love them, too."

I need Him to help me trade my doing for His doing.

I need His patience.
I need His joy.
I need His love.

You know, I needed God when I had one and two children. But, I had all of this stuff - books and gear and Grannies and know-it-all voices and I had me.

So I flailed about amidst all of that and tried to raise my children in the Land of I Can Do This.

But, God has whittled away all of that other stuff. He's taught me that He loves my children more than I do, and He loves to hear my voice calling out to Him and letting Him fill me with strength and wisdom and love and joy for my children. I don't have it. But, He does.

So, Mommas of one or two littles afoot - when you ask me, "How do you do it?" - I know what you're asking. And, I know what you're feeling and what's behind your eyes and I walked in your shoes and you are doing the HARD, HARD stuff of motherhood.

It is not easier because you "only" have one child. Or two children.

But, as you find your way, and the more you let God be your strength and realize that you cannot in the many ways you think you can, it gets easier.

And, it gets so, so good.

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