Monday, September 24, 2012

These Are My Jewels, Um, Designer Jeans-- What Mothers Sacrifice

I've been thinking a lot lately about a favorite talk of mine.  It's like a mini-parenting Bible condensed into a few wise words.  The man who gave it felt like a father to me, even though I had never met him.  But I learned so many things from his wise counsel and his warmth and his wittiness (learning just as much in a different way, from this man right now).  When he died, it took me a long time to get over missing him, as it were.

Okay, I'm already off the subject! And I haven't even started!

In his talk, These, Our Little Ones, Gordon Hinkley tells of a woman, who, in Rome, was sitting with some women as they compared their jewels with one another.  When asked, a widow named Cornelia answered, gesturing at her children, "these are my jewels."  They grew up to be the Graachi, two of the "most effective and persuasive reformers in Roman history (here)."  All because their mom loved them and believed that her most important job was being their mother. 

Noël HALLÉ | Cornelia, Mother of the Gracchi

All of us give up things to be a mother (even the very worst mothers give up something!).  One day I realized, that while I love this story, I am not in the slightest bit tempted by jewels.  Every year as the holidays roll around and those touchy-feely commercials come on about someone who went to "Jared," I always gag, bleuch.  The last thing I would want my husband to spend a bunch of money on is an expensive jewel necklace that would soon be lost or broken.  (now the gorgeous earrings my sister brought me from Australia, that I wear every day, are an exception!)

So I thought....what are my jewels?  What do I choose to give up in my mothering for the well-being of my children?  (this is so different for everyone!  what may be a jewel for someone is a much needed well-filler for someone else!)

Okay, here is my short (long) list:  more education (some day!).   Wearing designer clothes.  Or even something that is not old or needs to be ironed!  Wearing dresses (see below!  I actually got to wear a dress last Sunday, didn't notice it had spots on it until I looked at the picture!  ha ha).  Since I have been nursing, I compute at the moment, a total of nearly 8 of the last 11 years, this means I have had to give up dresses for now.  A full night's sleep.  Ugly legs due to my varicose veins from pregnancy.  Travel.  Piano  (I still get some travel and piano in limited doses). Learning how to make quilts and other sundry DIY projects.  A clean, chaos-free house and a weed-free yard!  Money.  To buy new cars instead of used ones, wait less than 12 years for new couches :).  Alone time.  Enough said.  Humanitarian aid -- there is so much I want to do!  Tending to my basic needs, like eating, sleeping, and using the bathroom. 


YET.  I feel way more than compensated for those things I have given up.  I feel more beautiful knowing I have sacrificed for someone else.  I feel smarter having had the opportunity of explaining the world to my little ones.  My perspective has changed so much-- making my life of movies and malls and cards with my husband before kids sound so empty and dull (and we sure appreciate each date now!  For more about how motherhood has changed my perspective, see here).  I wouldn't trade that good night's sleep for watching my beautiful child, who has grown with my nourishment and care, sleep like a little angel.


I didn't mean for this post to be so long.

Here are a couple of poems on this subject:

Italian Lake
You are the trip I did not take,
You are the pearls I cannot buy;
You are my blue Italian Lake;
You are my piece of foreign sky.
-- Anne Campbell

And my own version, which I thought would be easy, and funny, and wasn't either.

My Italian Lake
You are my supermodel legs
You are my Nobel prize;
You are my full night's sleep,
You're what money can't buy.


Isn't it true, though?  When life is done, will we care about the jewels or the pearls or the designer jeans?  Or have the ultimate satisfaction of knowing what we did was most important.  Money can't buy that.

Hence, this on our wall (too bad not only can I not spell "important," I didn't even notice my mistake for over a year!  Guess it's not imporant.)


What are your "jewels?"  This is so different for everyone, because we still need things that fill our own well, so we have enough to give.

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Service Month Update & I Can't Do This Alone

Results have been mixed this month, as with all the months that have gone on before. :)  Some things are going great.  My kids have had their hair done nearly every day and my big kids have taken home lunches to school every day.

So, packing lunches is a big victory for us.  In part due to the fact that I paid $0 into a lunch money account, forcing us to make those lunches every day!

I have loved refocusing my attention on making the little acts of service I do special for each child.  Just today I picked out a jacket for one daughter who needed it, and I remembered her new favorite color from the day I asked them about their favorite things. 

Are you ready for some excuses?  I've also hardly slept for 2 and a half weeks now, as baby learned to crawl out of his crib (prompting an emergency floor mattress placement), then caught a cold, and my three year old has been having bad dreams.  I've been getting up probably anywhere from 3 to 7 times a night, and serving as a human binkie the other half of the night.  (I go back and forth about being ready to give up nursing)  Yet I've tried to enjoy it, snuggling with little ones and realizing this isn't forever (please?).

We've also been adjusting to a crazy new schedule that nearly gave me a panic attack one day.  I've been so busy as we've readjusted to activities such as dance and soccer.  I called my mom and my husband one day, wondering what I should do.  I don't believe in being super busy (on top of that, I really hate being busy!).  I think kids need time to play.  And it's so hard to eat healthy when I'm busy.  And when one kid is busy, all of us are, because we have to shuttle that one child around.  This has been the hardest thing for me to have a good attitude about. 

Three things:  1) I prayed about this months focus before I chose it, and now I can see God's foresight.  In part because of what I'd have to go through with getting up at night and our new schedule.  So I'd look at them in their proper light with a decent attitude.  2)  I'm deciding that after simplifying as much as possible, I need to make the best of our crazy schedule, like finding ways to make it more pleasant, ie, listening to children's audio books in the car.  3)  While focusing on acts of service, its ironically been easier to know when to step back and let my children do something for themselves.

Overall, great month, I feel this huge welling love for my kids, now I just need to figure out how to get some sleep!

How do you handle it when your little ones get up in the night?  Which acts of service are easiest for you?  Hardest?

Monday, September 17, 2012

Summer Round-Up, Antelope Island

Let me apologize in advance for the number of pictures in this post.  How do you choose between so many fun ones?  Went to Antelope Island with our family from Maine.



This little boy gets a nasty mosquito bite on his ear.  Before we figured it out, his hugely swollen ear, which swelling extended to his head, freaked us out.


Looking for burrowing owls.
Cousin time.



 (sorry, this is a rewind from the moutains, I just missed it and I think it is super cute)

 These little cousins adore eachother.  It is so cute to watch them in action.







 Excited!  I love his little run!
 Learning to lasso.




 The original Basque boy.











What a great day.