Things have been extra crazy around here lately.
My little guy is full-on-speedy scooting (and into all sorts of trouble).
My daughter is potty training and my 4-year-old has decided it is absolutely no fun to listen to mom. EVER.
Some days being a mom in this house is nothing short of a marathon.
I haul my daughter into the bathroom.
And by the time I get her situated on the potty, the baby has scooted his way in there too and is busy sucking on something, well, disgusting.
I pull him out and try to get him focused on something.
Well, cleaner, only to return to find the toilet paper completely unrolled and my daughter’s skirt in the potty, which she is currently peeing into.
Good job, I guess?
As I am about to pull her off the potty I hear a blood-curdling scream from outside where my 4-year-old is playing. (Or, as it sounds, being torn apart by wolves).
So, I am forced to leave my daughter on the potty a few minutes longer.
Despite her demands for “candy now, I pee!” while I check on my son with a 30 lbs baby on my hip who is now wielding a metal spatula.
And it’s only 8 in the morning.
Plenty of time to repeat this delightful scenario a few hundred times before my husband gets home.
I guess it’s not surprising that I sometimes throw a baby at my husband as he walks through the door.
Or begrudges him 10 minutes to use the bathroom before he is ‘on’ with the kids.
It’s also not surprising that I sometimes crawl into bed 10 minutes after I get the kids settled and don’t move until morning.
These things aren’t surprising to me now.
Now that I am the mother of 3 little ones, but they would have been shocking and downright horrifying to me 5 years ago.
The idealist girl in love with a boy named Bill wanted to spend every waking moment with him.
Life is hard, and kids change things and yeah, I know.
We can talk all about ‘this season of life’ and other platitudes along those lines.
But when it comes down to it, I don’t want to just miss out on a decade of time with my husband while we raise our little ones.
He’s my best friend–I want to spend time with him each and every day. I want to show him I love him every day.
Not that I am very good at showing him I love him at the end of any day.
It’s just really hard to be loving when I feel like my tank is utterly and completely empty.
Sometimes I just need a nap or a walk by myself.
Which my husband understands and is more than happy to give me.
But more often than not I just need to take a breath. Count my (many) blessings and remember how much I really and honestly love this man I married.
I’m not talking about making time for dates (which, of course, is important).
Also, I’m not talking about sex (which is even more important).
I’m talking about making time for my husband every day–directing energy his way and loving him the way that I was delighted to do when we were first married, even if now the moments are tiny and interpreted and sticky.
It is so easy to love my husband–he is incredibly lovable.
It’s just that after a day of wiping cracks and making snacks, sometimes I’m just so done.
But, here’s the problem.
In my selfish little pity party (you won’t BELIEVE what I had to deal with today!) I was starting to get things all twisted around.
When my husband walked through the door at the end of the day he wasn’t just another human needing my love and attention–he was here to offer those things to me.
Because he loves me.
He wants to serve me.
Because I am his wife
How had I forgotten this?
Sure, I was wiped, but how much energy does it take to smile at the man I love as he walks through the door and lets him kiss me?
And yet, it was becoming routine for me to be crabby and short with him in the evening.
I want a better way.
And I want to be the wife I saw myself as 5 years ago.
I want to reprogram my mind and, even when I am tired and the kids are screaming and potty training is a nightmare, I want to love him as he loves me.
So, in those tired, drained moments, here are the things I try to do so that I can love my husband and receive the love he is so happy to give me:
1. Glance at a wedding picture and recall how excited I was to be his wife and have his children.
I wanted this.
I am lucky to have it.
Really, lucky.
2. Force me to laugh at his jokes (instead of rolling my eyes).
I am always amazed at how laughter, even if it is forced at first, can snap you right out of a mood.
And he really is funny.
We love laughing together.
3. Stop and objectively think about the things I am saying and the way I am acting.
Am I playing the victim?
Usually, if I have to ask myself that question the answer is yes.
And once I realize that it’s easy to change.
No one likes a person pretending to be a victim.
4. Come up with at least 2 good things to share about the day when my husband gets home.
My tendency is to dump on my husband the moment he walks through the door.
“I had to clean up this, and deal with this, and endure this!”
Sometimes when I am done with my tirade my husband will meekly ask, “did anything good happen today?”
And of course, a million good things happened that day!
If I lead with the good it’s amazing how my entire perspective and mood changes, toward my husband and the kids.
He is happy to hear me vent, but he deserves to hear more than just the bad.
5. Decide that we are going to have sex that night.
Whoa, did she just write that?
Seriously, try this.
Sex is a super important part of our (every) marriage (except when NFP is getting us down).
I personally rely on it to connect with my husband.
If I decide that we are going to have sex that night my behavior toward my husband is radically different.
I’m flirty and sweet and genuinely try to connect with him emotionally as I hope to connect with him physically later that night.
If I have in mind that we will be connecting intimately that night I behave like a WIFE much more than like a bedraggled mother.
Because that is what I am, a beloved wife–and even on the worst days around here, that is what I’d like to act like.
Oh wow! All of this is so ME right now and has been for the last few years of my marriage. And I only have one kid! But I’m just exhausted all the time, I don’t feel sexy, and I always roll my eyes. I can’t even get to number 5 (and I want to as does he!) but at the end of the day with work, household & kid responsibilities as well as financial stress, I just don’t feel as though I have the energy to “give” any more. I’m on empty. And that’s what it feels like, giving, not sharing & enjoying our relationship as we use to. But reading this helps me to realize that it’s not just me. I know my husband loves me and wants our intimacy back. I “know” we need to get this part of our relationship going again and this post is what I need to “snap out of it” and stop playing the victim. I am going to try my best to work through these steps…I really think it will help and I appreciate your candor! Thank you, thank you, thank you!
THANK you for speaking the truth! Especially for the tips on how to kick your own bad habits. This is me. Favorite part is wiping cracks and making snacks. I’m going to use that now! LOL.
In all honesty, I no longer feel attractive enough for number five. Not through anything my husband has done but after having six kids, gaining weight, and now in the first trimester….I have a hard time believing he finds me attractive still 🙁
Sweetheart, I’m sure he does. Seriously! Especially when you are pregnant! My husband always tells me that I’m at my most attractive (to him) when I’m pregnant. something about being a man… But, really, talk to your hubby about this. I feel confident that he feels differently than you think!
Oh, he says I’m more beautiful than ever, because he’s like that. But that ugly voice in my head likes to point out, what else can he say? As for pregnancy, I love that, at least for awhile, I’m supposed to have a big belly, lol!
sending you lots of love, sweetie! Believe you are beautiful. Tell that voice to shut up and believe it!
As a mother of 3 who has sent her oldest “baby” off to college this past year and will send my second “baby” off next year, I think it’s important to remember that while you’re in that stage, each day seems to last a lifetime, but it flies by in the blink of any eye. Having a married for ever for good and for bad marriage is key, that and patience, love, gentleness, kindness and a sense of humor. (love your line “after a day of wiping cracks and making snacks, sometimes I’m just so done.”)
It is so good to hear your very wise perspective, Susan. I can’t believe your girls are off to college! And I “know” that these years will fly by. You are just so right–it’s the DAYS that seem to last forever.
All the best–and so glad I know you.