Wednesday, October 13, 2010

The Art of Motherhood

I love this post written by Shawni

the art of motherhood

Sometimes I think the art of Motherhood tends to get lost in the shuffle in our culture.

As women reach with their might for their “dreams”…they gradually let fade one dream they were given right from the start.

A free gift.

The opportunity to become “Mother."

I'm not talking about becoming a mother through the act of giving birth to a child. That is another topic all together...one that some women, despite their very most valiant efforts do not get the opportunity to take part in.

I'm talking about once we have those children in our care, despite how we get them, the art of being "Mother." Motherhood as a career...one that is hallowed and beautiful and real and whole.

Running a company has become much more important in the world.

We want the rush of accomplishment.

Or making a name for ourselves.

A name to be hallowed to people we don’t even know.

While our children sit at home wishing for our arms to stretch around them.

I think it is human nature to seek for recognition. We want our efforts not to slip quietly away, unnoticed. And motherhood doesn’t naturally lend itself to Pulitzer prizes or red carpets.

No.

Initially motherhood tends to travel more down the dark-circles-under-your-eyes-for-want-of-sleep, and adornment with smears from sticky fingers sort of road. Then, in some cases, it leads to the disrespectful teenager stage, and then the glorious stage of being the dumb parent who messed up their kids while trying to raise them right.

Yes, it can be a thankless job.

But we Mothers tend to forget, amidst the chaos, that we have our own “Pulitzer Prizes” right in front of us. Little spirits in which we can sometimes catch a faint reflection of ourselves, for better or for worse.

And all that stuff that doesn't lend itself to the recognition our human nature leads us to crave? The endless laundry, the scrubbing, the same books read over and over and over again...the teaching kids tough lessons and the heart break that comes with letting them make their own decisions?

Well, those things are the scaffolding of the beautiful cathedrals we are building.

If we can only remember that each mundane thing we do as mothers contributes, if even in a seemingly minuscule part, to something so beautiful and holy: helping one of God's own children blossom and bloom into what they are to one day become.

And in the process we, ourselves, blossom and bloom...each day becoming a little closer to what God wants us to be.


Tuesday, September 21, 2010

clarification...

I must clarify, just for a moment, some thoughts on the "art of motherhood" I talked about yesterday. Because in speaking of that art, I'm not talking about whether or not women adopt or bear their own children...or whether women even have children for that matter (one of my best friends who has never had children practices the "art" of motherhood better than most people I know). I'm not talking about whether a mother works away from home in addition to all the work she does at home or not. No, I'm not talking about any of the extenuating circumstances that shift our unique lives off, individually, into different branches because of such varying needs and personalities and hopes and dreams.

In speaking of the "art" of motherhood I'm talking about motherhood as just that...a beautiful act of doing something with our hearts, and doing it gracefully, deliberately, in the best way we can taking into account our vastly different circumstances.

Just as a meticulous dancer balances and leaps, making her work look so compelling and beautiful to a bystander who may or may not even comprehend all the grueling work that has gone into her precision, so a mother can perform her work with grace and beauty. What comes across when someone makes what they love doing into an "art" is that it is important enough to them that they are willing to make the sacrifices needed to make it beautiful.

To me, motherhood is beautiful. A mother with a toddler on her hip, or a pacifier slung around her finger as a ring speaks to me. A mother who, tired from a day of working at an office, still comes home and puts on a puppet show with her children, or that mother who is willing to stop what she's doing and stoop down to look into the eyes of a worried child as she balances a load of laundry on her hip and lets the swirl of activity just be, even for a split second...those mothers know the art of motherhood. And I want to be like them.

To me, the "art" of motherhood doesn't have as much do to with all the extra things we balance...whether it is working full-time or developing a talent that fulfills us...as it has to do with being in the moment when the "moment" arises. Really reading a book with a child (instead of skipping pages in an attempt to please not have to read every word for the thirty-fifth time in a day like I do), or staying up late to talk to a teenager who needs a little extra loving, or praying our guts out that a child will make good decisions in life all contribute to the moments that make our motherhood an art.

There can certainly be no generalized "perfect mother." We are all too different. We have different husbands or have no husbands at all. We all have different children to care for who have myriads of varying needs. And most importantly we are all different...unique daughters of God, all with completely different abilities and attributes to develop.

But no matter what we do, or who we are, or where we live, or how many children we have, we can all make our little piece of motherhood an "art" in it's own right. We can go about what we do in a day just as a dancer goes about a beautiful dance, with precision and grace. We can keep getting up again, after numerous failures and mistakes, and keep trying. We have the power to choose to meet our challenges in a way that will help us grow and become who God wants us to be.

No one on earth may ever know the heart break we have endured, or the gallons of throw up we have cleaned or the amount of times we have counted to ten in valiant efforts not to loose our minds with difficult children. There are no Pulitzer prizes or even gold stars stuck to our foreheads for figuring out how life-changing "magic erasers" can be, folding load after load of laundry, or being able to whip up a decent dinner with the random assortment of what we have to work with after not making it to the grocery store for a while.

But on that same note, no one else will feel the rewarding heart-swell we will when a child finally makes a much prayed for breakthrough. No one else will quite understand the sweetness of an inside joke shared with a child we've cultivated time with. No one else gets to feel the same joy watching our children love each other as only siblings do, or save money as we have painstakingly tried to teach them. And those things come when we choose to make the way we mother a priority, whether we work outside the home or not, whether we live in a different culture or have different interests outside of mothering. They come when we put our heart into our mothering, no matter how different we may be.

Some day, as we look back, we will marvel at the strength and rhythm we were able to develop. Because what we have willingly done with love in our hearts has become our passion. Hopefully we will see that love reflected in the eyes of our children. And that will be our reward.


I must also clarify that I am writing these things mostly for me...one who has more patience to learn than I can even comprehend. One who gets frustrated and slams doors and forgets things right and left. One who gets distracted from the "moments" at hand quite easily and is just about as far from perfect as you can get. But also one who knows there is a God who cares and who is willing to help me every step of the way if I will only let Him in. And that is what I am hoping will somehow help mold me into the mother I want so much to become.

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Cute Accessory for Baby Girls


I saw this cute hair piece for baby girls. I like these because it seems like babies are always pulling off bows and headbands. This is so little that the baby won't even know it's there! And they are so cute and feminine. No one will confuse a baby girl for a boy with one of these on. I look forward to getting some of these when we are blessed with a baby. :) To order click here.

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Flooding

Kirky and Brittany, Shylee, and Asher came to visit this weekend.  Kirklan and Jake went snowmobiling.  I was showing Brittany the house and discovered that the basement was flooded!  It has been warm here and the snow started melting.  We were quick to put Brittany and Kirklan to work  ;) .  It is a good thing I had to show off my cool food storage area or else we would not have noticed all the water in the basement.  We were able to build a small dike out of snow and divert the main stream of run off away from the house.

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Quilts for Haiti

As a Relief Society we tied 2 quilts for the people in Haiti.  Myra did the hardest part and already had the quilt tops sewed together.  I was able to share the experience of ___________.  I am so grateful to be able to help.  I feel for the people in Haiti.  I cannot even imagine the sorrow of lost ones and hardship of living in a destroyed city.P1000681


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Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Wow!

These are my AMAZING Walgreens deals.P1000680



After sales, coupons, & register rewards this is what I paid for each item:

  • Progresso soup cans ............. 98 cents each

  • Lindsay Olives ...................... 50 cents each

  • Mabelline make up remover..........$1.99 each  (this is a great deal for me because I usually buy this at Walmart for $4.23 a bottle)

  • Huggies diapers for a baby shower ...................3.99 for a jumbo 50 pack.  This makes it 13 cents a diaper

  • 3 Musketeer candy bar ...........................49 cents each.  I had to buy them to get my coupon ratio up.

  • Fantastik Cleaner........................$1.75 each.  I will then turn in a rebate and get $5 back!  So in essence 3 Fantastic only cost me 25 cents after rebate!

  • Kotex pads-- 22-24 count ................................. 50 cents each.  (or  2 cents a pad)

  • Venus 5  blade razors-- 3 count ............... $2.99.  Plus this enabled me to use a coupon for free Olay body wash priced at $7.99.



  • Nabisco cookies ............. FREE!  They were on sale for .99 cents and I used a $1 off coupon on each box and got them for free.



  • I had a coupon for free Olay body wash when I bout Venus razors.

  • Q-Tips...............$2


I spent roughly 40.75 (before taxes).

* I will get $5 back from the Johnson & Johnson rebate

* I still have a $6 Register Reward to use

These are rough prices I would have paid before sales, coupons, and register rewards:

15.....soup

12 .....kotex pads

9...... diapers

4.....cookies

4......olives

7.50.............Fantastic

2.25.............candy bars

20 ..................maybelline

18 ...............razors

16............free olay body wash

Without coupons this would have cost:

127.75

I SAVED $87!

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Substituting in Arbon


  • I substituted the big room at Arbon Elementary.  Fun times!  I loved it.

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  • The kids are well behaved and so sweet.  My biggest behavior problem was trying to tone down the onslaught of stories each of them wanted to share with me.  It was interesting to see how a 3 grade classroom is run.  I love catching a glimpse of how Jake grew up.

  • This is the class I substituted.  The two boys, Lawrence and Ethan are in the 3rd grade.  Maria, the girl in red, is in the 4th grade.  Shay Ward and Katie Ward are cousins and are in the 5th grade.


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  • Of course, a small two-room school, like Arbon does not have a traditional lunch room with lunch ladies.  Most days the kids bring their own lunches.  However, once a week the kids get hot lunch.  A child's parent will bring the hot stuff from home to the school.  Then the parents and teachers act as lunch ladies serving up the good stuff.  The kids love to have their parents at school and are so proud of what their mom makes.


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