“Cherish these moments,” she said, “they will be gone before you know it, and you will miss them.” “Really?” I thought, as I scooped my son up off the commissary floor mid-tantrum. I’m going to miss waging war in the grocery store? I’m going to miss breaking up fights in the cart about who gets to hold the apples? I’m going to miss saying, “No, we aren’t getting ice cream today” 500 times before we reach the check out line? She can’t possibly mean that when my kids are grown I will have an eternal yearning to spend my days wiping tushies, cleaning up toys and enforcing boundaries, can she? If these are the most cherished days, I thought, then I need to turn in my resignation letter IMMEDIATELY. Every mom of littles has been the recipient of that phrase so often that it runs on a scrolling ticker through our brains. Unfortunately for me, this gentle reminder most often causes this thought to emerge: “I must be a terrible mom because I just can’t cherish watching the toy dump truck unload a pile of dirt on my living room carpet.” I must've been born without the mom gene that causes me to say, “I just love it when my kids wake me up five times during the night, and when they put shaving cream in each others’ hair. These moments are precious and fleeting and I don’t know how I will live once they are over.” Seriously, how can the majority of seasoned mothers look at me with a straight face and tell me that I will MISS THESE DAYS? I ask that question genuinely because for a while I thought I was doing something wrong. I thought I was missing some crazy joy in parenting, or that I was failing miserably because I didn’t see my kids through perpetual rainbow-filled glasses. And then, something made sense to me. ******I played soccer growing up. From the time I could walk through my freshman year of college, I spent countless hours on a soccer field. It was, in many ways, my second home, and my source of consistency amidst countless childhood moves. A soccer field was not only my sanctuary, but also my battleground. I have extremely fond memories of playing soccer. I made forever friends in the process and learned innumerable life lessons from my coaches along the way. Just last month, a friend asked me “Do you play soccer?” and I instantly said “Yes!” but then realized I haven’t touched a ball in 7 years. I still dream about soccer, I see myself on the field making diving saves, and when I watch a women’s soccer game, my love for the sport is reignited—stirring up all of the positive memories I have from that time in my life. Soccer is an integral part of who I am, and it always will be.
While I have continuously loved the sport of soccer, I know deep down that I didn’t always love the game. Just hearing the words “Get on the line!” gives me PTSD. I was undoubtedly the slowest on the team and absolutely dreaded any kind of conditioning. It wasn’t just the running, I hated, but the two knee surgeries I had as a result of playing, and the countless disappointments. The disappointment of going from a starting varsity goalkeeper in one state to a JV player in another. The games where I let an easy goal in, or played my heart out and came up short. My soccer career was filled with many setbacks, and devastating losses, but the pain that accompanied the game, never muddied my enthusiasm for the sport. The heartache was always overshadowed by the victories—the games where I was unbeatable and composed and intuitive. I can vividly remember the last soccer game I ever played, it was hands-down the best game of my life. I remember my incredible teammates—the ones that supported me through surgeries and cheered me on during every conditioning session. Those great games and fond relational memories are what I hold most dear, as they eclipse the moments of disappointment associated with playing the game. I think those veteran mamas feel the same way about parenting littles that I feel about soccer. They look back on it with fond memories, clinging to their successes and minimizing their failures. They remember mid-morning snuggles, a baby’s first steps, and hearing “I wuv you” out of a toddler’s mouth. They remember wiping away tears, hearing a baby giggle, and they miss being the MVP in their child’s life. They remember the mom friends who were monumental in that season—the ones who provided emergency childcare when their cup was filled to the brim, and who cheered them on when the race seemed too overwhelming. They simply love the sport of parenting, and it is the crux of their identity. For so long when I would hear “Cherish these moments”, I thought it was an action statement—something I could tangibly do to make myself a more appreciative mom. I’ve come to realize that’s a big pile of baloney. Rather than being a demand for the present, I think that phrase is a charge for the future. The word “cherish” is used as both the present tense (cherish NOW) and the future tense (cherish LATER). To be honest, I think it is impossible to cherish parenting moments in the middle of the season. In the same way, I didn’t cherish my time on the soccer field when I was in the middle of the game. Cherishing only happens once we’re sitting on the sidelines, looking back at the past. For now, all I can do is simply play the game. Those seasoned mamas are up in the grandstands watching with adoration as I play the sport that they love. One day, I will join them and watch affectionately as young moms chase their kids around the grocery store. Watching them will bring back memories of my time on the field, but I won’t be sad my kids are out of diapers, I will simply miss playing the sport. What sweet relief that realization has been to me. I no longer fall victim to mommy guilt that says I am not appreciating all of the moments adequately enough. Instead, I just get to enjoy being on the field right now. I get to have days when I win and moments when I lose, and when the season is over, I can sit at the End-of–Season banquet and watch the highlight reel. I won’t have to cherish ALL of the moments, but get to cling to the ones I love. I get to remember the good games, and minimize the defeats. I get to pass by young moms and smile because I, too, have so much love for the sport they are playing, not because I want to be back in the game but because the sport gave me some of my most cherished memories. I get to love the sport of parenting, but sometimes hate the game. Now when I hear, “Cherish these moments” I no longer say begrudgingly, “Don’t worry, I am.” But rather I respond, "I most definitely will.” The cherishing will come in the post-season, but for now, there are many more games to be played.
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It had been one of those days. You might know the kind. A day in the deepest part of the trenches. The dark part, the messy part, the part of the parenting trenches that screams, “You aren’t doing anything right!” As 4:00 rolled around, I knew my limit was coming. Four o’clock is my breaking point, mamas. It is the point in the day where the line is drawn. Either we race with peace to the five o’clock finish line (when Daddy comes home), or we begin deteriorating in a way that mimics a civil war battlefield. On this particular day, I felt the battlefield coming on. Britton couldn’t keep his hands off Beckett or prevent his tongue from uttering his favorite word (poopie). I had already spent the previous seven hours disciplining this behavior and redirecting his attention - so let’s just say by 4:00 I raised my white flag. I was finished. And so, at 4:01 I decided the only way we would all survive the battlefield was to sequester each boy in his respective room to 1) keep them from killing each other and 2) keep me from imploding due to a loss of sanity. Since my discipline-o-meter was rendered inoperable by 4:00 p.m., putting the boys in their rooms was the BEST I could do. But, my best felt terrible. In hopes of salvaging some gold stars from the day, I thought I might have better luck fulfilling my spousal duties, so I began to cook dinner. I had delicious dreams of an asparagus ricotta flatbread that would serve as an edible band-aid to my exhausting and treacherous parenting day. Since I am a sub-par baker, the BEST I could do was purchase premade pizza dough from the commissary. But, I couldn’t help but think of those Pintastic moms clutching their pearls over the thought of store-bought pizza dough, and so, my best felt terrible. Despite my valiant attempts to spin/twirl/toss that dough like a pro, I was missing a critical piece of knowledge: You can’t stretch cold pizza dough. Consequently, my flatbread dough looked like this when I put it on the pan. (Seriously, this was THE BEST I could do. And oh my goodness, it looked terrible). Have you ever been there, mama? If you haven’t, just keep parenting longer. You can’t escape these years without having days when the best you can give feels terribly inadequate. When all you have left to provide is the tiniest love offering, the smallest olive branch, or the weakest handshake. But listen mamas, even your terrible bests are terribly pleasing to God. You see, putting my kids in their rooms was my only chance to protect them from my temper. Buying pizza dough was the only way dinner would ever get made. And throwing my pizza dough disaster into the oven in its holiest form (pun very much intended) was my only chance at salvaging the day. In 2 Corinthians, Paul is dealing with a “thorn in his flesh”. We don’t know specifically what this was (possibly an ailment, or a pair of rambunctious toddlers), but during this time he had a vision from God. “But He said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for My power is made perfect in weakness.’ Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest on me.” (2 Cor. 12:9) Even in my weakest moments, God’s grace is sufficient. The grace to remove my kids from one another, the grace to be OK with sub-par, and the grace to let go of my perfectionistic tendencies. Because Christ’s power is made PERFECT in our weakness. Did you hear that? Perfect in our weakness. Perfect in our brokenness. Perfect in our exhaustion. Perfect when all we can give is our Terrible Best. As I threw together the holey pizza, I began to see it transform. The delicious and appealing toppings started to cover up the imperfections of the dough, creating a HOLY reminder of God’s grace. His beauty made perfect in my imperfections. My terrible best became terribly beautiful right before my eyes.
These trenches are deep and exhausting and demanding, but they are also made perfect when we accept God’s grace. Don’t let your terrible bests define you, but rather be like Paul and boast of those weaknesses so Christ’s power can rest upon you. He’s there, mama, ready and waiting to make your terrible bests terribly perfect for His kingdom. A week ago, my big guy turned 4! In honor of his birthday, I wrote him this letter...Maybe you can relate? Dear Britton, It’s a big day for you. As far as you can see, your day is to be filled with cupcakes, presents, and, only because I love you (and apparently don’t care about my own sanity), dinner at Chuck E. Cheese. These are what four-year-old birthday dreams are made of, sweet boy. Soak it all in because your toddler days are coming to a close. But, for me, I can’t help but look beyond the traditional birthday hullabaloo and focus on this new season before us. There is a newness that accompanies a birthday, anticipation of what lies ahead, and even you could feel it today. Sitting at breakfast, excited about the endless birthday celebrations to come, you asked me a simple question, “Mommy, what do four-year-olds do?” You have a way with questions, little one. A way that often brings me to my knees, hoping beyond hope that I can speak just an ounce of truth into your soul. Praying I don’t waste an opportunity to encourage and disciple you. But, this simple question rendered me speechless. The reality is, dear child, that parenting you this past year has been the hardest thing I’ve ever done. (If we’re being honest, you are genetically predisposed to be an obstinate three-year-old, since my parents still graciously tell stories of my epic tantrums and sassy backtalk. You are the flesh of my flesh, Britton, ain’t no denying it.) To be fair, there were good days. Plenty of them. Like the day you asked, “Mommy, why did God forget your penis?” (Still not sure how to answer that one, mostly because I can’t stop laughing when I replay those words in my head.) Or, the day you insisted on wearing your snorkel for every waking moment, but then got incredibly frustrated when you couldn’t eat and hold the snorkel in your mouth at the same time. Or, the moments you would snuggle up next to me just to whisper, “I love you, Mommy”. And my favorite, as if all stars were perfectly aligned, the night you sat down for supper and said, “Wow, Mommy, this is a lovely dinner you made.” I nearly fell out of my chair. But, as I’ve heard from mom after mom, guiding, instructing, and disciplining three-year-olds is not for the faint of heart. It is constant, it is grueling, and it is often without reward. The past year has been beautifully frustrating in more ways than I can recall. Beautiful as you began to take on the world with all of the humanness you could muster and frustrating because you started taking on the world with all of the humanness you could muster. We are broken creatures, made in God’s image with conflicting desires for things of this world, and that opposing combination exposes itself so vividly in a toddler. Every parenting moment lives in the balance, wavering between gracious obedience and passionate defiance. Your compassion can turn into rebellion in the time it takes me to pour milk into a sippy cup. (Because, of course, I poured it into the purple cup and I forgot that you hate all things purple. My bad.) And so, as I pondered this simple, yet provocative question, my head began to spin. Selfishly, I wanted to say, “Four-year-olds clean up their toys and actually hit the toilet when they pee”, but I knew there was more wisdom to be imparted here. My other gut response was to respond with things that four-year-olds DON’T do such as, “four-year-olds don’t hit” and “four-year-olds don’t spit” and “four-year-olds don’t talk back to their mamas”. But alas, before I could even make sense of the words coming out of my mouth, I muttered, “Four-year-olds teach their brothers the right things to do.” Simple. To the point. But, somehow I was left unsatisfied with my answer, and this question has been stirring in my heart all day.
The truth of the matter is that God made you, Britton. He made you fiery and strong-willed and determined and physical and spirited. But, over the last year, those same God-given gifts have been the source of my frustration in parenting. First, let me apologize. You must know that I wouldn’t take a single one of those qualities away from you (even though I’ve tried). Britton without his strong will is simply not Britton. A passive Britton is no Britton of mine. Rather than trying to stifle those qualities, I want them to shine from you like God intended. So, when you think about what four-year-olds (or more importantly what 14- or 40- year-olds) do, you can let this list be your guide.
When you blew out your candles this evening, I couldn’t help but exhale, letting go all of my anxieties and concerns from parenting a three-year-old. As I took the next breath with you, I breathed in hope for this next year. Hope that I can encourage you to use your gifts for good. Hope that I can help you navigate this treacherous mortal world. Hope that we will laugh more than we cry. Hope that on this day next year I can say, “Four was the best year yet!” You are so, so loved, dear one, and I pray you know that with every fiber of your body. Happy Birthday, Britton! Here’s to the Fantastic Fours! But, just to be clear, four-year-olds DO have to wear pants to the dinner table. It’s not that kind of party. All my love, Mom |
McKinleyI am a lover of people, a child of God, and a laugher at jokes. I write words, cry tears and smile at strangers.
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