Joy, week 13



We just finished one of our favorite weekends of the year:  General Conference weekend.  It’s the most time we spend in front of the TV every six months and I work hard to prepare food the family loves throughout the weekend.   There are always warm cinnamon rolls on Sunday mornings and lots of blankets to curl up in while we sit together and listen to living prophets speak.  It is a joy to let the world go it’s way while we bask in the spirit of the conference.

In a strange twist of the heart, tonight I feel like hiding instead of marching out into the week filled with energy based on all I heard.  Instead I dread meeting the world in the morning, wishing instead that I could linger in this safe feeling a little longer.  I don’t feel ready to pick everything back up.  I also find that when we have special things going on it’s harder to be focused on what’s coming Monday morning because the weekend is so full that I don’t do my usual preparations and thus end up feeling unprepared for the life that will hit bright and early tomorrow.

While I feel inspired and uplifted by all that I heard, I also feel a little overwhelmed, needing more time to sift and sort in the quiet of my mind and heart before I make a plan of action.  This is another reason for dreading the new week.  I know that I’m in such a busy time of year with sports and school for the children that there won’t be a slow moment anytime soon for me to do the sifting and sorting to my satisfaction.  I worry that daily life will rush through like the wind and sweep me away, leaving me unchanged.

I know it doesn’t have to happen this way.  It’s just that it will take a great deal of effort to make sure it doesn’t.  I hope I can do it, because the particular stage our family is in already requires a great deal of effort to feed them daily, and do the laundry, and monitor the homework, and drive and plan and even to play.  I know it will be hard and that hard things are worth doing but I also know that too many hard things going on at one time doesn’t usually work out like I hope/think it will.  But I’ll give it my best!  The first step will be to get out of bed in the morning and wake them all up and put a smile on my face even though I’ll want to hide under the covers.

The week was a good one.  A little less eventful than most of the weeks I’ve had this month, I tried to improve in fundamental areas like meal preparation, cleaning, reading, and so forth.  It was still busy, but there were two nights this week when we had the children in bed by 9:30 p.m.  A huge victory.  We also had two nights this week when we went as a family to events, and that felt good too.  Tuesday night was a fundraiser at the church for a youth conference later in the summer.  We enjoyed supporting our teenagers and visiting with friends.  Wednesday night we all went together to our son’s lacrosse game and loved watching him play.  He had a great game, coming up with the ball in all kinds of surprising ways and running hard in spite of his knee pain.  It was a lot of fun to be there together in the gently falling rain and support him.  I much prefer it over the “divide and conquer” strategy we have to implement on other nights when there are so many things going on.

As for my goals, some areas are strong and others are weak.  My daily planning has been too much reduced to simply listing where everyone has to be and when, and making sure I’m not forgetting something important.  I know these things need to be done, but I need to do a better job of handling spring sports while also keeping my eye on the big picture and finding every opportunity to infuse even these insanely busy months with things that are important to me in the long run.  The weekly planning has followed that same course and as I tried tonight to focus on the big picture for April, I found I couldn’t really wrap my mind around a method for doing it.  It was kind of disconcerting, but a good signal to me that I need to be more creative in working to use these busy months to my advantage instead of feeling owned by them.  That said, I do feel that I’ve developed a healthy habit of asking myself in the moment, “What is most essential for me to do right now?” and putting my energies in that direction.

In the areas where I’ve committed to spend just 15 minutes a day, I’ve done little or nothing.  I want to fix that.  I can find 15 minutes for personal goals.

I sat down yesterday and reviewed some things for the month of March, looking at my goals and my plans and the shape my days have taken on lately.  I have concluded that it was a great month even if I didn’t cross many items off my list.  It was a hard month, but good things happened.  I had more opportunities to be of service in March.  I enjoyed interaction with many friends, a goal that I thought would be hard for me to reach.   The General Young Women’s choir was such a highlight!  I enjoyed many great moments with my children and feel like I’m inching my way toward being a better mother.  It was also a month when I spent much more time than usual out of the home and away from my children.  More appointments, more commitments, more of everything, it seemed.  I have been reminded that I pay a price, indeed, we all pay a price when Mom is gone, and at this particular stage that price is painfully obvious.

I should mention that my neck pain is decreasing after the car accident last week, a blessing I am very thankful for.  I appreciate the Lord’s mercy and goodness manifest in so many little things in my life which could be much more difficult than they are.

And so a new month begins and a new week awaits.   Happy April!

Jennifer

Joy, week 12




*Note:  I started this post on Sunday afternoon and returned to it late Sunday evening, then fell asleep typing.  I’m sorry to be publishing it late!

As I type this post, my two youngest girls are playing together in the kitchen and the room resounds with their laughter.  It reminds me to pause and smile with them, letting their happy moment pull me in and lift me up as well.   I review in my mind all the moments this week when earnest words, big blue eyes and little heads bobbing side to side while they told me all about such-and-such brought joy to my heart.   These little ones are such a blessing!

It was such a joyful week.  Last night was the culmination of weeks of practice and I was thrilled to attend the General Young Women’s Meeting of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.   Watching my daughter sing with all her soul was unforgettable.  The warmth in my heart was equally strong each time I saw a girl I know on camera.  It has been years since I’ve been involved in an experience that has filled my heart with the love of God like this one has.  I am eternally grateful for every minute of it and have a list of things I’m going to do to keep this memory close.

One of the blessings that has come of this choir experience is a closer relationship with my daughter.  She’s been wrapped in the arms of so many wonderful women lately that her tendency to shrug out of my hugs is gone.  She’s learned to want the love that is offered in outstretched arms and even leans into them.   I was amazed when, after the broadcast, she grabbed my arm and pulled me toward a friend of mine so that SHE could get a hug from her! (Thank you, Julene!) I have this desire to hold on and make sure she stays that way.

As I’ve pondered my activities this week, and even the activities of the past few weeks I realize that a larger percentage of my time has gone to my teenagers, meaning that instead of dropping them off and going home to the rest of the family I’ve spent a large number of hours going with them, staying with them.  Their schedules have just worked out in such a way that they’ve had activities where it was appropriate for a parent to attend with them.  I’ve loved it, loved the pace and the fun of keeping up with this incredible, energy-filled stage in life.  It’s been an interesting taste of what will be my daily life in a few short years.

The challenge is that I’ve also had a two year old at home crying for Mommy.  She is so brave, so independent, and yet so totally dependent on me that I often shake my head in wonder.  If she hasn’t had enough of me (meaning undivided attention and arms wrapped firmly around her) she won’t sleep.  I can’t count the number of times recently when I’ve walked in the door and immediately seen a little body running toward me yelling, “Mommy!  I need you!”  Her words do something funny to my heart every time I hear them, expected as they’ve become.   I am amazed and grateful that I could be so necessary to someone, but there’s also a little secret in there:  I know what she means, and that it’s a real need, and that she knows I will do something about it as soon as I can.  I get it, and she gets that I get it.  But she does need it before 11 p.m.!

Because I’ve been running with my big kids and not just running them to and fro, life at home has suffered.  The house isn’t what it should be and the children are up later than I’d like.   I sincerely tried to plan my week wisely to allow time for recovery in these areas, but the way things turned out was nothing like I expected.

Every day
there was a moment when my schedule miraculously cleared a little.  A carpool or a ride worked out, saving me precious minutes in the car.  I would shake my head in surprise then run to the work I was behind on, believing I would get it done.

Without fail
, the phone rang or a knock was heard at the door and I was able to help someone who needed encouragement.  I had some really amazing conversations and felt the love of God in these experiences.  Just as they ended, every time, my life suddenly resumed it’s hectic, noisy pace.  On Wednesday I shook my head in amazement and got down on my knees to acknowledge God’s hand at work.  The timing was too exact to be anything but.

I loved that pace, that feeling of “see a need, meet a need.”  There is a precious feeling that comes with service, one I crave.  I love the rhythm the Lord imposed on my week; I just need to learn to maintain all the other parts of life in a more fluid way so those opportunities don’t trip us up so often.  I know that service comes with some degree of sacrifice, but the basics ought to be covered.  At least a dozen times each day I thought, “I’ve got to write that in my journal!” but there was so much to write, and so much happening, so many things being pushed until late in the evening that much of it remains unwritten.

So, when it’s so obvious that the Lord has something other than housework in mind, you can’t go and judge yourself or your week on that thing alone.   I had a moment of 200% humility when a dear friend knocked on my door unexpectedly and my kitchen looked like a bomb had gone off in it.  I let her in, we sat and talked, and then I let her sweep my floor and clear the kitchen table.  I have NEVER let someone do something like that before.  It was hard to do, but I did it. (Thanks, Aubree!)  On Saturday morning I took a deep breath and walked outside to ask a neighbor for help with one of my children who was struggling with her behavior that morning.  They kindly let her work in their yard with them, giving her the attention she needed while also separating her from the situation she had created inside.  Yes, I had some precious help this week.

We celebrated a birthday this week, the magical #6.   We read books together.  We made an emergency repair on a vehicle and 3 hours later I got rear-ended in that same vehicle.  I sold concessions at a lacrosse tournament.  We celebrated wins and endured losses, prayed and worked.  I met new people and discovered connections with them that surprised me.  The good and the bad were sprinkled liberally among each other throughout the week, but my strongest feeling was one of gratitude for all that could have gone wrong but didn’t.  I met some needs and blew it on others.  I felt broken this week, and weary, but I learned something that I should have learned long ago:

Sometimes life backs us up against a wall, a big, thick wall that is terrifying to stand against as you watch the world approach.  I’ve spent too much time pinned against that wall, part of me wondering if it’s going to kill me one day.  This week, as I stood against that wall (particularly on the day when we had issues with our car) I really worked to be mentally and emotionally tough, to have faith and not fear.  As these feelings of total relief and gratitude filled my heart in the midst of obstacles that cost us precious dollars and even more precious minutes, I felt the wall give way and realized I was falling into the arms of my Savior and experiencing his grace to a degree that I haven’t felt before.  I’m learning that his Atonement is about so much more than sin.

As I said, it was a joyful week.  (Sorry, another travelogue this week!) Honestly, I’m not sure how the week held so much, and there’s much, much more I’m not sharing!

I did work on some goals.  My garden seeds were ordered and have arrived.  I MUST get the seeds started right away, a task I feel a bit intimidated by.  I did some weeding.

Although it doesn’t sound like it, I did a lot of cleaning.  I went through both of my teen-ager’s rooms and closets, organizing, washing, sorting, cleaning.  While I firmly believe that kids should learn to take care of their own spaces, I also look around at my own house and see the effects of being too busy.   They’ve been feeling that same pressure and I enjoyed giving them a calm place to come home to.  I also did a lot of cleaning up after the little ones, like the day when my youngest threw a glass of water across the kitchen in a moment of frustration.  There’s nothing like cleaning up glass and water together!

I did a better job of cooking dinner, washing laundry, etc.  I also did a bit of reading.  No sewing.  I didn’t touch my machine.  I’ve completely blown it on birthdays this month, missing every one so far (except my son, thank goodness!).  I feel badly about that.  I worked for a few minutes on a project for my home but haven’t had the time to return to it.  Still, it was a great week and I feel blessed to have lived it.  I hope to do a better job this week!

Jennifer

Joy, week 11



Tonight I feel overwhelmed with gratitude for the intense but wonderful week we had.  It was so many things packed into seven days that I hardly know where to begin.  I sat down this morning to write in my journal and it took more than two hours to summarize the events and what they mean to me.

There were things that didn’t go well.  We didn’t adjust well to the Daylight Savings time change and everyone is living on the brink of exhaustion.  My youngest two literally became nocturnal for several days and for no reason.  The lack of sleep took it’s toll and soon my baby was battling a fever for several days.  Six of us have ugly coughs.  I spent $145 on gas this week to get everyone to their commitments.  We ate fast food for dinner four times.   I didn’t touch my blog.  Basically we were a family running too fast and lots of things didn’t happen.

But lots of other things DID happen.  Wonderful things.  Things I need to remember.

My oldest four children take piano lessons but my son’s schedule prevents him from going at our scheduled time.  His teacher has allowed us to take a temporarily open Saturday slot when we can fit it in and my 7 year old has stepped into our open Tuesday slot so we can keep it.   My son needed to select a recital piece but we knew he couldn’t go on Saturday and I had four hours of driving to do on Tuesday night.  At 10:00 p.m. on Tuesday night she texted me and I drove him over to her house to listen to her play the piece for him, then give him a 20 minute lesson on the first two pages.  I sat there and learned some interesting things about how he learns.  The first time he played the notes he was already memorizing them.  It was fascinating.  We came home at 10:30 p.m. and I thought to myself that we might have just set a record for the latest piano lesson of all time.  More than that, my heart swelled with gratitude for a woman who cares so much about my son and his progress that she would do such a thing.  My heart is still swelling with thanks to and for her.  It was just one of those moments that a mom doesn’t soon forget.

On Wednesday I hosted a casual lunch for five women I’ve known for years.  We all still live in the same general community but are so busy with our families that we rarely sit and talk.   I’ve really backed away from entertaining in the past couple of years so hosting it felt like a stretch for me.  Gratefully I got the house tidy and the bathrooms clean before everyone arrived.  Honestly, the event itself really wasn’t a big deal, but it became a singular thing to me when I did a little math and realized that between the six of us we have thirty seven children.  It was fun to watch the surprise on their faces when I said it, and the slow smiles that spread across their faces.  I feel so blessed to know these amazing women who are raising great families and living lives I admire tremendously.  What would we mothers do without each other?

Wednesday night I also had the opportunity to speak briefly at a Relief Society meeting in my local congregation.   It was a great opportunity to gather with more awesome women.  I go to these meetings and see women who have raised their families and take hope in knowing they lived through it.  I see women just starting their families and feel inspired by their energy and enthusiasm.  I see women who have experienced great loss, trials, and broken dreams who have moved on and made the best of life.  It is wonderful to be with them.  To have the opportunity to share some thoughts about the book Daughters in My Kingdom and to share my feelings about my Savior with them was icing on the cake.

Three minutes after speaking I was running to my car to pick up my husband and son and head to a late appointment we’ve been anticipating for weeks.   It was an appointment that was paradoxical in nature:  surprising yet completely expected, an answer and a question at the same time.  My feelings and thoughts since have been so completely split that I’ve opted not to talk about it, write about it or do anything about it until I can settle in my heart exactly what I’m supposed to do.  It’s like we’re standing here, poised to take the first step that is also the millionth step.  I know so much but so little.  I am so willing act yet so unsure of what comes first, determined to do it right and certain I’ll mess up.  It’s an interesting sort of pause.

That night 10:30 p.m. found us at the In-N-Out Burger drive through so my husband and son could eat a second dinner while I talked on the phone to a friend in need.

Thursday brought more driving, practices, games, scrimmages, lessons.  We went to the local caucus meeting for our local precinct, leaving my daughter babysitting for the second night in a row.  The meeting took more than three hours.  At 10:15 p.m. I walked to my car feeling frustrated by the outcome of the meeting and wondering if voicing my opinion in that setting was worth another night away from my children, another day of homework that hadn’t been done, another dinner I didn’t make, another night when I wasn’t there to tuck the little ones in and check the baby’s temperature.  I did my duty.  I’m glad I went.  But we paid a price for it.  At 11:00 p.m. I was at my kitchen table with my five year old son, making a poster about him for his Star of the Week day in kindergarten.

Friday the week took a wonderful turn.  I went to school to spotlight my little man and he completely ate it up.  I rather enjoyed sharing with his class just how much he adds to our family even though he is child #6.  I told them that he loves practical jokes and his teachers’ jaws dropped when they heard he’s filled his big brother’s bed with baby powder a year or two ago.  The other boys in his class looked at him with new admiration in their eyes and I’m really hoping that no one went home to repeat the joke at their house.  My little guy ate it up.  I love him so much.

My parents flew to town on Friday and my sister and her husband came down from Logan that afternoon as well.  We loved having them at our home.  My children love them so much and while I wish we saw them more, it made me sort of glad that my kids understand what a truly special thing grandparents, aunts and uncles are.   My Mom and Dad were great, picking up my daughter from the Jr. High and taking her for a smoothie “on the way home”, driving to watch my son’s lacrosse practice, wandering out to observe our #6 digging in his garden, tickling the youngest three girls until they were positively breathless with delight.  They listened, watched, complimented, helped, smiled, and generally showered us all with love as if they have no problems of their own that they put on hold to come see us (which they do).  Friday night all the adults went to dinner:  my parents, my sister and brother-in-law, my brother with his wife and new baby, and us.  It was a really enjoyable evening.

Saturday morning was the highlight.  My daughter is singing in the choir that will perform during the General Young Women’s Broadcast for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints in a week.  She was up at 5 am preparing for the dress rehearsal and on her way to Salt Lake City by 6:30 a.m.   The rest of us headed up a couple of hours later.  We walked through the doors and the sight of the choir took my breath away.  They looked perfect, so beautiful, like a sunrise.  It was the reason my parents came to town, to support this 13 year old girl of ours.   I feel overwhelmed by the generosity of their trip, the magnitude of their gesture of love and support.  Because children under age 8 cannot attend official meetings in this building it was a singular opportunity to take our entire family, including the little ones, and be there together.  Again, my sister and her awesome husband joined us.  We sat there as a group and smiled and listened and felt happy.  The last hour was a filming/recording session and I loved watching it.  This whole choir experience has been such a great experience.  I’ve learned so much.  I am different simply because my daughter gets to do this.

The rest of the day was a happy blur.  Lunch from Chick-fil-A with another ridiculously large pile of sauces in the middle of my kitchen table.  Kids playing with their Uncles’ ipads.  Some of us ran to our last futsal game of the season, where my little one took a nap in Grandma’s arms and my sister-in-law joined us.  Grandma and Grandpa took my five year old on a special shopping trip for his birthday next week.  All the ladies went to a favorite store (where we were all remarkably good) and to a chocolate cafe for dessert, then back home with pizza in hand for dinner.  Games of Acquire in my dining room.  It was just one of those days that oozes with happiness.

Then, as quickly as it began, it is over and all our guests are back at their homes and it’s our big little family again.  Some of them play with legos, others play Acquire in anticipation of being allowed to play with the uncles and Grandpa next time.  Some of them snuggle with me because it’s been a crazy week and they need a little reassurance.  I went with my daughter tonight to the last choir practice before the meeting on Saturday.  I sat next to one of the dearest, best, most exemplary women I know and just felt so, so grateful.  It’s quite an experience to be in a place where you can sit still, without distraction, for 2.5 hours and have gratitude wash over you like waves on the beach.  I am overwhelmed by the goodness of so many parts of our week.  I came home and got down on my knees to thank God for every one of these people who have been a part of my week in small and large ways, to ask for the Lord’s blessings to be upon them.  My heart feels so tender, so aware that the hard work is worth it, every bit of it.  I am grateful to be a mother.  I am also reminded that the free-flowing setting on my tear ducts tonight might be inversely related to the number of hours I’ve had to sleep.

Now, this report has been a travelogue instead of a report on my goals.  I couldn’t help it.  It was too full.  Here’s a quick summary.

My daily habit of scripture study keeps me going.  Period.  I’m working hard to clean the house and feel like it might be getting better.  I’m dreadfully behind on laundry and what’s clean is piled on my bedroom floor.  Oh well.  I wish I’d been better organized so we hadn’t spent money on fast food this week.  Oh well again.  I’m doing a lousy job of exercising.  I’m writing daily in the joy books I started for my children, which is really a blessing to me.

Some weekly goals fell through simply because our lives couldn’t hold them.  I penciled things in today, hoping to fix it this week.  I met my goal to talk regularly with friends in an abundant way, also meeting my monthly goal to make time for getting together with someone at least once a month.  I managed a few minutes of sewing.  I held my two little girls A. LOT.  I tried a new recipe that most of us liked.  I reminded myself daily of a woman who inspires me to live happily.  Thinking of her made me smile and live with more energy.

More than anything else, this was a joyful week.  It was a joyful week that required a lot of me, but which also broke my heart enough to let the good things really pour in.  I am amazed at the hours I spent basking in the joys of family, friends, and most of all, in the miraculous love that God has for us.  That love is joy.

I wish that kind of joy for you this week.
Jennifer

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