18 April 2013

thoughts on parenting. as they grow.

DSC_4847.jpg

DSC_4852.jpg

DSC_4866.jpg

The other day when I was at the gym I couldn’t help but overhear two mothers talking. One had a small infant and the other had a little girl around eighteen months. Perhaps they had another toddler, perhaps not. As I juggled Jess in my arms, trying to distract her while we waited for Josh’s swimming to finish, my ears wandered towards their conversation. “It’s just so hectic now, non-stop you know,” said the one mother. “Oh I know, I never imagined kids would be this hard. Look at the moms whose kids are in school and they stay home. That’s when it gets easier. I guess we’ll get there eventually,” replied the other. “Ya, eventually it will be easy.”

I wanted to run towards the young mothers, with arms flailing and my words shouting “Don’t be fooled, it only get’s harder! Prepare yourself!” But, as you can imagine, I didn’t do this. I silently smiled to myself and kept my thoughts inside my head. Now, I don’t want to scare any mothers out there. I don’t really mean that it gets harder, I simply mean the challenges shift. And I suppose I was never really ready for this shift in parenting. It tends to become less about the physical demands (the nursing, the waking in the night, the lifting of car seats) and more of the emotional type. I now find myself searching for answers to difficult questions that that I honestly can’t answer myself. Questions about God, religion, why there are protesters in front of a doctor’s office. I’ve had to explain divorce and why sometimes mommies and daddies don’t get along. I can barely understand these issues myself, let alone explain them to my five and seven year old.

jess flowers

The emotional has overtaken the physical.

My days of toting toddlers around in a baby wrap have been replaced with chauffeuring them all over town and facing the challenge of being on time. My moments spent worrying if my two year old was eating enough vegetables is now spent worrying if he actually eats the lunch I pack. Does he trade off the healthy items I carefully choose, or worse, does he toss them in the trashcan? Is he sneaking in sugars and candy and frozen treats while at school? Has my healthy lifestyle that I uphold in our home backfired? And if it hasn't, will it in the future?

Do I spend enough playtime with my children? Our days are filled with so many activities, outings and homework sessions that I constantly worry if I give each of my children the attention they desire. The attention they need.

Did I practice math and spelling enough with Jonas today, did I read books to each of my children, is the binky that Jess loves causing her teeth to move, should I have Josh's hearing retested, will Jonas eventually warm up to the idea of swim team, is he making the right friends at school?

These are the questions that weigh on my heart during the late hours of the night. These are the questions that are always roaming around in the back of my mind. These and many more.

DSC_4854.jpg

DSC_4872.jpg

DSC_4876.jpg

The important note to take away is that we must embrace parenthood. We must embrace our roles as a parent at every step of the way, and there are plenty of steps on this journey. I can’t help but reflect on what I overheard the mother say, “Eventually it (parenting) will get easy.”

Nobody ever said parenting was easy. It doesn’t come with a map, an instruction manual or even a version of cliff notes, although many times I wish it did.

We create our own notes and manuals one day at a time. It is a continuous journey, and uphill struggle that is filled so many joys, and it is the over abundance of joys that make you forget about the stress and trials of parenting. One good game of hide and seek outweighs the sleepless nights, one round of family t-ball erases the memories of struggling to feed an infant, and the laughter of your children teaches you that happiness is all that matters.

These children of ours, they blossom and grow.
They expand and learn.
And as parents, it's our job to do the same.
To grow together.
Learn together.
Laugh together.
And this, I hope, will be the path to happiness.


4 comments:

  1. I could not agree with you more. I think parenting gets much harder as your children get older. The emotional hard is much harder to deal with, I think. I'd take a toddler tantrum over a pre-teen hormonal melt down any day. Parenting never gets easier, it just changes. You're doing a great job mama. We can see it! xo

    ReplyDelete
  2. Interesting read - as a parent of a 20mth old, like those gym women I had always had this idea in my head that things would get easier! But we had a talk at my mothers group recently about this exact topic - there was a panel of women, some of whom had primary/high school aged children and hearing them echo similar thoughts to what you've written here made me re-think a lot of things! It's a tough gig, this motherhood thing - but oh worth it :) Keep up the good work mama!

    ReplyDelete
  3. absolutely beautiful pictures. we are also loving the new bloom of daffodils. I know how you feel, I am ever stressing about doing the right thing for my daughter. I've recently started just enjoying the moment. Yesterday I sat in the park for 5 hours, reading and studying and watching my daughter play. There were moments I was watching her with tears in my eyes because this is it, this is life and we were enjoying the moment, and it was such a beautiful moment. We were both there, happy. And isn't that what life is about, just enjoying the moment and being happy? Stopping the constant worrying and just letting go in each others company. easier said than done but I really couldn't think of a nicer way to spend our free days :)
    http://myfroley.blogspot.com

    ReplyDelete
  4. Love this! I could have written the very same thing....but probably not quite as eloquent. :)

    ReplyDelete

Thank you for leaving a comment! I love reading each and every comment and will reply to them here in this comment section. Thanks!

SITE DESIGNED BY PRETTYWILDTHINGS