motherhood · reflections

When the Words are Perfect

We had one of those days yesterday.  And I had started my day with this and knew I needed these words.

And he who does not take up his cross and follow after me is not worthy of me…” ~Mt. 10:38

Perhaps our greatest daily temptation is to be impatient — to refuse to suffer.
Perhaps my greatest daily sin is to refuse to suffer — to refuse to take up the cross of Christ.
Perhaps my greatest sin is refusing to wait on God’s ways — but to want my own will done — now.

Patience is a surrendering to suffering — a willingness to wait — a carrying of the Cross.


–the words are Ann Voskamp’s…the grace is the Lord’s
I’m not a very patient person.  And my girls suffer sometimes.  Not that they haven’t done so much to add to frustration and stress.  Like the room that’s always a mess, no matter how many times we clean.  Or the crumbs that lead me to sweep three times a day.  Or the sass that I just can’t stand to hear coming out of my six year old’s mouth.
But they aren’t going to change overnight.  Attitudes and habits I’ve long let go unchecked will only change in time as we work together to become a family that is more like Christ.  A family that carries our own crosses daily.
I’m a complacent person.  I tend to do as I’m told.  I don’t usually fight back.  And sometimes I’m unhappy for it.  My girls are strong-willed, defiant, fiercely passionate about whatever they have attached themselves to in that moment.  Beautiful, wonderful gifts that will make them independent, free-thinking adults.  But today these gifts are snares that entrap my own shortcomings making me feel that nothing I ever do will be good enough.
Then last night, while Joshua entered a mountain of receipts, I read this and these words fell on my broken, mommy-weary heart.
They just want me.  Every day, every moment, they just want to know they are loved.  Cherished.  Protected.  Delighted.  
And this morning, when I rose before light with Joshua to make the coffee he takes on his now hour-long commute each day to a job that brings him home late, I read these words from a book so worn it lay flat when I turned it over, pages open to here, different colors of ink from many years of study lining its pages….

If I can stay in the middle of the turmoil calm and unperplexed, that is the end of the purpose of God. God is not working towards a particular finish; His end is the process – that I see Him walking on the waves, no shore in sight, no success, no goal, just the absolute certainty that it is all right because I see Him walking on the sea. It is the process, not the end, which is glorifying to God.

–From My Utmost for His Highest by Oswald Chambers
May I be worthy of this process of mothering….may God continue to bless me with words of love.
motherhood · summer

How Much I Love the Beach

I love the beach so much I am willing to drive 5+ hours in a minivan by myself with three kids.  Obviously I learned nothing from last time.

I love it so much I’m going to stop in Augusta for reinforcements, aka Aunt Kelsey and all her paraphinalia.

I love the beach enough to agree that Mama and Audrey can ride back with me and bring the new dog.  I’m not really a fan of dogs in my car.  Max may have to ride on the roof.  Except now Linda and Glad are gasping and will never speak to me again.  just kidding….

I love the beach so much that I’m putting aside the guilty twinges of leaving Joshua here alone with a fridge full of leftovers and a que list on netflix.

I love the beach.

But I love blogging too, so don’t miss us too much while we’re gone, if anyone out there actually reads this semi-regularly.  I tried to post a counter so I could be all cool like Kim, but it didn’t work.  I think God knows I need to be writing for myself and Him first and not caught up in whether or not others care.  Working on that…

Speaking of, if you did need a Brackett randomness fix, I’m guest posting over at Julia’s on Friday.

and I might hack my mom’s computer some this week to give you a beach update. 

Aloha!
(we’re not in Hawaii of course, but I’m so excited to get my toes in some beach sand we might as well be)

amelia · motherhood

Stop the Screaming!

I know people have all sorts of names for the infamous pacifier, and God bless the inventor of this lovely scream stopping contraption. 

My big girls called theirs “nite-nite”.  Belle just always said whatever Madelynne did and Madelynne started calling it that when she realized she only got it at bedtime.  That was when we more zealous about the paci habit so it wouldn’t be as hard to break. 

Well, Amelia has broken us.  I try to keep it put up, but sometimes it’s all that will stop the ear-splitting shriek she’s been perfecting the past few weeks. A shriek of anger, delight, annoyance, joy…doesn’t matter as long as she’s making noise.  And in the true fashion of a third child asserting her right to possessiveness, what do you think she calls her paci? 

“MINE!”

applesauce on her chin…her new grin for when i pull out the camera…no idea where her mine is
http://schemas.google.com/blogger/2008/kind#post · motherhood

How Summer Looks

Summer looks different when you’re a mommy.

A few summers ago (seven to be exact), I would wake when Joshua left for work and indulge in a book or a morning nap or a mindless day of puttering around not really worrying about all the items I didn’t cross off my to-do list today because there was always tomorrow.

Then I became a mommy.  Mommies don’t really get the same kind of summer vacation.  I’m sure my husband who leaves at 7 a.m. and sometimes doesn’t return until 7 p.m. would beg to differ but this is my blog, so too bad. 

Sure, I realize I’m blessed to be home with them all day everyday.  Yes, I get to go to the pool if I feel up to the challenge of making them get out of it when playtime’s over. 

Yes, I get to take them on picnics to the lake and let them swim and then spend the next half hour wrangling them out of wet suits and shrieking, “Don’t stand in that shower barefoot!” Or explaining that if you lay your towel in the sand, you will in fact get sandy when you try to dry off with said towel. 

Yes, we go to the library for books and get dirty looks from all the people who can’t wait for summer reading program to be over so that lady with the squealing toddler will stop coming and interrupting their precious quiet reading time. 

These days my quiet time consists of putting Amelia down for a nap and listening to her test out her vocal range for up to 45 minutes while I ponder the fine differences between grocery stores sales list because we need lunch food and supper stuff and something besides cereal for breakfast occassionally.

I love it, I do.  I’m blessed.  And I chose it from here on out.  But sometimes I wish I had appreciated carefree days more before I had kids.  And I wish I’d done more then, so maybe I wouldn’t have so much to do now. 

201.  summer sunrise
202.  gigantic boxes of cereal
203.  anticipating payday
204.  second breakfasts like little hobbits
205.  weekly menu plans
http://schemas.google.com/blogger/2008/kind#post · motherhood · project 52

Weekend Run Around

Whew.

It’s over.  And we survived.  And I fell asleep reading at 9 o’clock last night and hadn’t written in my journal or blogged or had quiet times or done the dishes or folded the laundry or swept the floor or packed the lunches.  But it’s over.

And the beauty of it all is, I’m sure we’ll be doing it again.  The weekend run around.  Here, there, and everywhere trying to make it to everything and keep everyone happy.  Or at least fed. 

We started last week really.  One Act Play festival at the community theatre.  Joshua and I keep doing this because it’s something we can do together….except then we never see each other so it’s really not working out. Might need some revising of that plan.  Friday night opener.  It was great, actually, but by Sunday afternoon I was really tired of teenagers.  Which is what I get for casting a play about high school students with a mix of middle and high schoolers.

Bright and early Saturday morning we bribed the girls with McDonald’s and it was pack up and head over to the yard sale my school was sponsoring as a fundraiser for a special needs camp.  It was successful in the grand scheme even if I did let go of a piece of furniture for only $20.  But it’s out of my house and that $20 will buy us admission to the water park in the very near future.

We broke from the yard sale briefly to head to sweet ballerina’s recital.  Pictures are worth a thousand words….

After the recital, Joshua took the girls up the hill to a birthday party for one of our favorite people and I headed back to finish the yard sale transactions.  All in all, I came home with about $75 profit, new decor, and pants for Madelynne to wear in the fall that do not have holes in the knees….yet.  Maybe next year, we should market it as a yard sale swap since most of my funds came from fellow sellers.

After a brief afternoon crash by this mommy and this sweet baby–

It was back to theatre and readying for Mother’s Day.  Guess what I was surprised with on Sunday morning?  I’m linking it here so you can get your own because I may not share!  All in all, a crazy weekend, but a life-joy-sweetness-delight-thankful weekend.  I just don’t want to do it again any time soon.
http://rcm.amazon.com/e/cm?t=random05a-20&o=1&p=8&l=bpl&asins=0061658197&fc1=000000&IS2=1&lt1=_blank&m=amazon&lc1=0000FF&bc1=000000&bg1=FFFFFF&f=ifr