I spend a lot of time pushing my kids on the swings.
A lot.
If given the opportunity they’d swing for hours and each time they lock eyes with me still yell, “Higher! Higher!”
I hate to admit it, but I don’t enjoy pushing kids on swings.
It’s tedious, it’s monotonous and it feels pointless.
No matter how hard I push, they will need another push.
No matter how I try, they will not learn to pump and swing independently, at least not yet.
And when I have three kids all swinging at once I walk back and forth, pushing, pushing, pushing, pushing.
There is joy in those hours we spend swinging.
I know.
The beauty of the day, the smiles as they swing up and back, up and back, the giggles, the squeals.
But, even with these bursts of joy it often feels so…unimportant. So small.
This season of my life, a season with 3 little ones 4 and under, is largely characterized by my distraction.
The moment I find myself in–changing diapers, building forts, complimenting Lego creations, cutting food, digging in the sand, picking up toys, scrubbing floors, wiping noses, breaking up fights, pushing kids on the swings–feels so small.
So very small.
Some days it seems I am just watching the clock tick by until I can get to what I want to do, the things on my list–a business I am determined to build, blog posts I am dying to write, patterns I am eager to create and sell.
And the kids and all the work that goes along with them are just things I need to get through.
I’m ashamed that I feel this way, but it’s the truth.
I would be devastated if my kids ever knew or understood this is actually what was going on in the mind of their mother and I pray they never find me out.
And I struggle with the feelings of smallness that characterize Motherhood more than anything I have ever faced, ever.
I stepped out of the working world 4 years ago when my first baby was born. Since that time I have lived my life quietly at home as a mother.
I wish I could say I delight in the smallness of this life.
Say I don’t long to be important and engaged in some sort of momentous work.
I wish I could say this life was enough for me.
But some days it doesn’t feel like it is.
The challenge of withdrawing from the world and embracing smallness started immediately after I became a mother.
Immediately.
Weeks after my son was born I opened up to my mother and grandmother about how I was feeling, about how I was struggling to feel like holding and feeding and loving a baby was…enough.
My grandmother reacted to my confession by launching into a rant about “women these days” and how society has lied to us, led us to believe that our life is only as valuable as the things we accomplish, the dollars we earn, and the praise we receive.
How women like this (women like me) suffer, struggle and stumble when it is time to raise a family.
I certainly was struggling.
Was I (am I) doomed to fail at what I know is the most important work of my life?
Years later I can see the truth in my grandmother’s words (maybe not the kindness, but the truth).
I am a product of a society that values greatness, but I am called to live a life of smallness.
Called to be a mother.
But how to become small?
How to let go of greatness or at least worldly importance?
How to become a mother?
Even 4 years in I have very few answers and few success stories.
Some days I honestly wish I had never started my little online business, never started a blog, and wish I had somehow been able to find contentment and peace and joy in the smallness of Motherhood alone, instead of creating all of these little projects that ultimately pull me away from my work as a mother.
But, as painful as it is to say, I don’t think I would be happy as just a mom.
Perhaps my love isn’t pure enough, perhaps my prayers not strong enough, perhaps my life too cluttered and too distracted.
All these thoughts twist through me, along with the to-do list I will never accomplish, as I stand here pushing my kids who are still swinging and swinging and swinging.
“Higher!” “Bigger!” “Push me ‘gin!”
My kids are beautiful.
The day is perfect. I am so lucky but so small.
And I know that smallness is holiness.
I know that I am called to do “Small Things with Great Love” and that for “Love to be real, it must cost—it must hurt—it must empty us of self” (St. Mother Teresa).
But even in these words, there is a sense of greatness that I don’t feel, that I don’t sense when I am here, pushing my kids on the swings for hours.
Perhaps when these years are gone I will see how these small experiences shaped me, how God used them to relieve me of my pride and foolish ambition.
And perhaps I will think back on those hours and days and years I spent feeling small and unimportant as the most important moments of my life.
Perhaps.
But for now, all the accolades and mouth service we give to the importance of mothers does not change how very hard this job is–and how very small it makes us feel.
I feel the exact same way most of the time, Nancy. Hang in there! I came accross a book a couple years ago called “The Apostolate of Holy Motherhood” and it is about some aparitions of the Blessed Virgin Mary to a wife and mother. It really helped me start to (I’m still struggling like you) learning to embrace the smallness.
Thanks for the book recommendation. Between books right now! It’s so good, but as all good things are, hard.
I feel these ways a lot. And I don’t think if I stopped all my side projects it would go away. I think I’ve finally found balance in my side projects and then also being full time with the kids alllll the day long. You are wonderful.
thanks sweetie. I find balance and then I loose it. Round and round.
I think the emotions posted by Nancy are legitimate and real. If any stay at home mom (or not stay at home) of young children is HONEST with themselves, they would note that these feelings ring true. They could acknowledge the struggle that occurs with being a stay at home mom in this culture that applauds personal accolades over instilling family virtues in your young ones is hard. Just because something is hard, does not mean there is something wrong. If we look at motherhood as a vocation, then we will grow in holiness by dying to ourselves and our wants, which is painful, as Nancy described. Growing holy sounds wonderful, but it hurts as God chips away at our imperfections and self-fishness. If you are not challenged by your vocation, you are not growing in your vocation, and thus closer to God… Beautiful post, thank you for being open, vulnerable, real and HONEST>
Here Here to Nancy. Amen to Jodi Olson.
Oh Jodi, thank you. You get it because you are in the trenches too. I swear what you wrote here is more beautiful than I what I wrote in the post.
Nancy, hang in there. As I read this I am thinking your being way to hard on yourself. You may need to take a break from the actual blogging and the pattern designs for a while and just try and enjoy your babies and the summer here in Minnesota. I think your trying to do way to many things SLOW down. Like St. Thérèse of Lisieux always said she tried to do all things for the love of God, even if it was picking up a piece of paper off the floor. I have to agree with Grandma that our not so mother friendly culture makes it hard to be and enjoy motherhood. It wouldn’t hurt to get a physical. If you haven’t had your TSH or T4 done request that to be done, because if your thyroid is out of whack that can and will affect your moods and your heart and your hormones. It is amazing all the things that the thyroid controls. Now that it is summer do you have any young girl baby sitters or confirmation girls that need hours, that could come over while your home and entertain the children while you get something done around the house whether it is blogging, designing patterns or just laundry or scrubbing the floor. Oh and before I forget have a Vitamin D level also. Are grandparents around that could you can ask them to give a morning or afternoon of help?.
I don’t live that terribly far from you, if there is someway we could connect beside through your blog, I could give you my home #. I would be more then happy to meet with you and the kids. Just so you know I’m not a stocker. I just like to lend a helping hand if you would let me.
Love and God bless.