Mothering in the Trenches

Today I feel like my two year old looks:


I think I could fall asleep just about anywhere right now.  Except I can’t, because I’m the mom and I have work to do.  Although I started the day before anyone else in my family, I have miles to go before I sleep.  So I’ll satisfy my wish to sleep by sharing these pictures of a little girl who thought she was just resting for a minute, but who has now been sleeping for over 2 hours (I did move her to the couch so she’d rest more comfortably).


As I write this, I must admit that even a busy house like mine has moments of calm.  If not, I most definitely wouldn’t have a blog.  As my two year old sleeps in a chair, my four year old also sleeps on the couch.  My oldest is off with friends, my second oldest off at a soccer tryout (yes, I thought we were done, but we’re not, and that’s ok), and three of them are playing outside.  My baby crawls around at my feet, teaching herself how to manage her sippy cup.  I have a lot to do, but I’ve reached the point that there will ALWAYS be more work to do than I have time to do it in.  If I never pause to record it, to write about how I feel, then I’m losing a layer of my life — one that offers meaning and perspective to all the other layers.  Sometimes the words seem to pour out of my mind and recording them is an investment in myself and my family, part of our story.

Today is June 4th.  I have done 34 loads of laundry since June 1.  This is not an exaggeration.  It’s my life.  I was behind on laundry before school was out.  I’ve had company in town and we went on a short vacation, so I’ve had catching up to do.  Now, I’m pretty sure that’s a lot of laundry, but I still have more to do!  I also have 5 baskets full of clothing to fold and put away.

Welcome to my life in the trenches, on the front lines of humanity.  All I’ve done this week is laundry and cleaning, but my house looks just like when I started.  My family room floor is covered with stuff.  You know, stuff .  Things that you’re tired of cleaning up, but you can’t really get rid of them because they’re relevant in someone’s life but that someone thinks the carpet is an appropriate place to keep it.  I’m tired of spending so much of my time dealing with stuff.  One of my goals this summer is to edit, edit, edit our belongings and get them down to an easily manageable level.

In the midst of these efforts, there have been moments of calm like I’ve described and moments of craziness.  Last night as I was cooking a special dinner for my son’s birthday, I also had crying children, someone on the phone, someone at the door, and 7 other children (we had friends over) involved in a craft activity in my dining room.  Naturally, that was the moment when my baby fell and bonked her head, bringing the noise and tension to a crescendo while the rice browned in the bottom of the pan.  Those are the moments when I feel like I’m going to snap, when I wonder how I got myself into this predicament and why on earth I thought I could raise a large family.

But they pass.  Only a few minutes and the baby is calmed, the telephone is silenced, the salesman at the door realizes that I’m truly not interested.  The food turns out great and everyone’s hungry tummy is soon filled.  The turmoil subsides and I’m left with another tiny lull in which to work like crazy before the next wave hits.  And it always does, in some form or another.  Slowly but surely I’m becoming more consistent in handling these moments with calmness instead of frustration.  I still need to work on the stress.  By the time dinner was ready, my shoulders and neck were so tense that I could hardly bear to shred the meat.  Honestly, though, there have always been moments like that.  They just involved fewer people and therefore a smaller chorus.  The difference is that now the lulls are my only chance to get work done, to catch up.  A few years ago the lulls meant I could do something fun, or sit down myself.  When I do that now, I’m doing it at the expense of important work.

The past few months have taught me that there will be work no matter what I do.  I cannot tell myself that I’ll read a book when the work is done.  The work is never done.  Instead, sometimes the work just needs to wait.  I have to balance this carefully, but I can’t afford to ignore the weighty matters of life that will never seem as urgent as the dishes.  I’ve got to lay down next to my youngest boy and talk about life.  I’ve got to sit and chat with my daughters.  I’ve got to read good books so that my mind will stay fresh.  I’ve got to exercise faith that in the end, it will all turn out right.

This morning I re-read the words of Julie B. Beck from the April 2010 General Conference .  Some of her comments really struck me.

“A good woman knows that she does not have enough time, energy, or opportunity to take care of all of the people or do all of the worthy things her heart yearns to do.  Life is not calm for most women, and each day seems to require the accomplishment of a million things, most of which are important.  A good woman must constantly resist alluring and deceptive messages from many sources telling her that she is entitled to more time away from her responsibilities and that she deserves a life of greater ease and independence.”

Just this morning my husband and I were talking about how our lives have reached the point that we are working as hard physically, mentally, spiritually and emotionally as we were when serving missions.  Each day seems to hold the same amount of intensity and the same levels of exhaustion.  The key is to recognize that it’s designed to be that way, and that it’s a privilege to pay the price.

I continue with another passage from the same talk:

“Revelation can come hour by hour and moment by moment as we do the right things.  When women nurture as Christ nurtured, a power and peace can descend to guide when help is needed.  For instance, mothers can feel help from the Spirit even when tired, noisy children are clamoring for attention, but they can be distanced from the Spirit if they lose their temper with children.  Being in the right places allows us to receive guidance.  It requires a conscious effort to diminish distractions, but having the Spirit of revelation makes it possible to prevail over opposition and persist in faith through difficult days and essential routine tasks…. Because personal revelation is a constantly renewable source of strength, it is possible to feel bathed in help even during turbulent times.”

Wow.  As I read these words this morning, I felt great inside.  I am in the right place.  I am doing the right things.   Too often I let myself believe that the revelation I need can only come in quiet moments of tranquility.  Today I was reminded that it can and does come to mothers  in the trenches.

And so my lull has passed.  The toddlers are awake, everyone is hungry and I must gather my group in from the neighbor’s yard.  Not a single item of clothing has been folded or put away.    I am still tired, my kitchen is still dirty, and there are still miles to travel in my day.  But I am happy and somewhat refreshed, so I will call it time well spent.

Back to the trenches!  It’s the right place to be.

Hopeful Homemaker

It’s Official.

We have a teenager in our home.


Today our oldest turned 13.   Interestingly, it feels perfectly natural.  I feel like we’ve already been in this stage for a while. I’ve decided that I’m going to spend a lot of years living with teenagers, so I’m going to enjoy them as much as possible. I also want them to know that we are their safe place, that their family loves them best of all.

In all, I think he ended up having a great day.

He loves to ride his longboard, so adding new trucks and wheels were a big deal.


The Paris Trucks were a birthday surprise.

Paris Trucks

And the Orangatang wheels  (durian) were his own purchase.  He’s been earning money with the goal of buying them in time for his birthday.  His Dad drove him to the only skate shop that had them in stock.  It’s funny that something so simple can 1.  cost so much, and 2.  make someone so happy.

Orangatang wheels

He wants to begin playing lacrosse, so a couple of sticks and a package of balls came in handy.  It also helps when you have a brother who can play catch with you.


Tonight a couple of buddies wandered over and we enjoyed brownies and some homemade vanilla frozen yogurt on the front porch.




As  a mother, I feel really good about today.   I’m happy that he’s got a couple of fun new things, but what I feel really good about is the knowledge that he is going to bed tonight feeling absolutely CERTAIN that his parents love him.  A LOT.

He’s right.  We do.

Will we make it?

The school year ends on Friday, which seems like cause for celebration.  However, I am currently wondering if we’ll make it through the rest of this week.

Today is one of those days.  You know, the kind when the school hours are spent holding crying children all day, then breaking up the fights they get in while you’ve got all four of them piled on your lap.  They cry, so you try to comfort them, and then someone else cries and needs comfort, and then they get jealous and want to be the ONLY person you’re helping so they begin to cry all over again and kick and push and fight each other for the only prime real estate in the world:  your lap.

I thought I’d do laundry today.  I’ve been thinking that for the last 10 days.  Not good.  I needed to do laundry today, because we’re all at the end of our clean clothes, and we still have two days of school, and as soon as school’s out on Friday we’re driving to Denver for the weekend.  Yep, the laundry is important.  And I went upstairs to work on it at least a dozen times today, only to be thwarted by the person at the door and the little ones who have been incredibly high maintenance today.

Tonight is our piano recital.  Sounds simple enough, but I also had to email the soccer coach who planned a last minute practice, get out of the gymnastics carpool, explain to my nine year old why we’re not going to Pack Meeting, etc.  The recital is at 6:00 pm, early enough that I can’t serve dinner AND get the kids in clean clothes AND drive 30 minutes to get there on time.  It’s late enough that by the time they perform, we spend a few minutes greeting everyone, and drive home it will be too late to start making dinner without major emotional meltdowns due to hungry tummies.  Yes, I could have put something in the crockpot, but just didn’t manage to pull my brain together in time.  I used the ingredients for my crockpot meal on Monday so I could be at the doctor’s.  Since I haven’t had time or mental capacity to put together a real meal plan and do some legitimate grocery shopping we’re running low on quick snacks and meals.  At this point I figure there’s no point in shopping until we’re back in town.  So pretty much I’m going to have hungry little ones at a piano recital and there’s not much I can do about it after being in the car all afternoon listening to my five year old say the same five words over and over again with her nose plugged.

In a three minute break between crying babies, I thought I’d make a cake.  I figured we’ll just get Chick-fil-A for dinner (major treat, we rarely do that) and I’ll have a cake to celebrate my children’s efforts in piano and school.  You know, make a mini end of school celebration.  I tried a new recipe (good for me!), set the timer carefully and then discovered that the baking time printed was way too long.  Thankfully I checked on it 10 minutes early and pulled it out, but it’s much more brown than it should be.  I got it out of the bundt pan, poked holes in it, whipped up a glaze and poured it over to try to moisten it up and salvage my efforts.  Bummer.  Oh well.

Then it was off to gymnastics for one daughter and a chance to explain to the coach why my other daughter won’t be there for a week and a half  (great waste of money) and figure out the summer schedule.  Yes, with three daughters in gymnastics, it looks like I’ll be there Tuesday through Friday every week.  So much for a lazy, unscheduled summer.  One activity and there went most of the week.  In the middle of all this the coach says to me, “You’re coming to the dinner tomorrow night, right?”  I pause, trying desperately to remember what she’s talking about.  I guess we’ll add that to tomorrow night’s lineup, then.  Bring it on!

So, now that I’ve arranged carpools for the kindergartener who has to go in the afternoon tomorrow for a field trip, and the daughter I can’t get to gymnastics because I’ll be 20 minutes away at a last minute soccer meeting for a new team with a new coach, and figured out that I guess I’m going to a dinner I didn’t know about (and making dessert sometime before that), we’ll try to find clean clothes for the piano recital in an hour.

At some point in the next 24 hours, I’ve got to clean the car, wash our clothes, get an oil change and tire rotation, make it to the bank for cash, get to the store for road-trip snacks, find our bags so we can pack, clean my house so I’ll be willing to come back from our trip, fill out and turn in a bunch of paperwork at the school, and write thank you notes for all the teachers who have taught my children this year.  Honestly, I could do it…. it’s just that my three little ones are the wild cards, and today hasn’t been encouraging.

SO, if this post seems like it’s written in run-on sentences like a music piece that’s entirely staccato, it’s because that’s how my brain is working today.  And with a trip, two huge deadlines looming next week, and the hope that we can get back to town in time for a special funeral, it looks like relief won’t come until mid-June.  I remember my sincere feelings from yesterday about making more time for my armor building and wonder how things could go so very wrong in just a few hours.

I know that my life will never be simple with 8 children, but I do believe that someday I’ll be able to clean and do laundry with more predictability than I can now.  But guess what?  That someday will come because I won’t have a little 9 month old baby crawling around the house putting anything and everything in her mouth, or a two year old who changes clothes 20 times a day in search of the elusive, “cutest clothesies” ever, or a four year old who needs a cheerleading team in place so he can use the bathroom, or a five year old who stresses about everything.  It will come because they’ve grown and won’t be there for me to clean out their mouths or change their diapers or fold them up into a little ball to tickle and kiss and love them.

Oh, as much as I want order, am I ready for the trade?  It will come, probably, sooner than I realize.  So right now, when I look around my house and feel like crying because I don’t have any idea WHEN I’ll rescue it from its current state of chaos, I have to remember that I chose what I have, and it’s what I really want.


So please excuse me while I smother my baby with kisses.  Never mind that her face is covered with pretzels that she snagged off the floor while the big kids were snacking.  And the recital?  Well, we probably won’t look great, but we’ll be there and support our children/brothers and sisters.  And the weekend trip?  Hopefully we’ll all be wearing clean clothes.  And the house?  I’ll get it clean sometime.  Yes, we will make it.  It may get ugly, but we’ll make it.  And while all the craziness swirls around us, at least I’ve got them all.  I can’t forget that.  I’ve got to live like I love it.  Because I do.

Jennifer

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