I am in a hurry. I am stressed and trying to get everything situated so I can leave in a few minutes for the evening. My patience is paper thin.
In the background I hear my son say to his sister, “Sshhh…Let’s be really quiet and then maybe Mommy won’t get mad anymore.”
Time stops and I am in a modest living room adorned with house plants. House plants I dote on; arrayed in terra cotta with nutritive spikes imbedded in warm soil. I am kneeling in front of a forest green micro fiber couch, sunlight spilling onto my back like warm abashment. I am young, I am thin, my hair is undone and I have much to learn.
I speak out loud caught up in the words. “Please Father. If you give me a son, like Hannah of old, I will raise him up unto Thee.” I knew what the words meant, but I didn’t understand what the words meant.
For almost four years I had pled for a child. I was close, so close. We knew within weeks I was pregnant and I would like to think it was that prayer, but my thrice weekly visits with a reflexologist for the past eight months could have made an impact as well. I think both events conjoined into the space and time in which I was ready to receive him.
I thought mothering would come easily to me. I was the oldest child, had been babysitting since I was 11, and had been a preschool teacher for years. I was told I had a way with children and could often be found surrounded by them since I was like a big child myself. To my dismay it did not. When my son was laid into my arms, I had the connection; the heaven meets earth connection where you’re allowed a glimpse into that heavenly sphere in order to take your child as he is placed into your arms by God himself. It was that moment that I fell in love with the future, with my own potential, with a creature who stared into my eyes like the ancient sage that he is. I knew I was in possession of a spirit who dwarfed mine, an intelligence who the Lord saw fit in his mercy to send me.
My spirit reached out and shook his hand. “Nice to meet you, sir,” my spirit seemed to say, but all my frail tabernacle could blurt out was, “Hi Bubby.”
I handed him off to my husband for a bath. I was a little afraid to take control of his little life. I hesitated in nursing him, in changing him, in bathing him. I had the baby blues, but would not recognize it for months. Our days were little and orderly. If I stuck to a schedule, I was okay. I read The Baby Whisperer and stuck to her schedule by the letter. It was the EASY plan: Eat, Activity, Sleep, You time. Both of us thrived. We knew exactly what to expect from each other at any given time. I took a lot of pictures and wrote in his baby book. I stayed pretty much to myself. It was RSV season and I didn’t take him to church. I didn’t like anyone to hold him…I didn’t like going to the mailbox. I got frustrated with my husband more and easily. My son’s head had been squished when the
He grew and he was as delightful a child as I have ever known. He was calm, temperate, and engaged. His eyes were wise and he was patient with my awkward attempts to do the smallest tasks for his comfort. My husband and I struggled to find our place during this time and to make matters worse, he would lose his job. The added stress of having him at home trying to find work was taking a toll.
The bishop approached us one afternoon in our home and prayed with us. He told us that he felt inspired that we should put our home on the market immediately and move into my parent’s basement apartment. We were stunned and we didn’t want to do that, but we did not question him. We both looked at each other and nodded our heads. It never occurred to us to say anything, but yes. We were stressed. We were arguing. There was so much to be done. This was our first home and it was small and we needed to repaint the kitchen.
We had had an argument and my husband was outside washing the windows and I was inside cleaning the walls. My hair was in my face and I ran up to get a clip. I put my little boy in his bouncy seat onto the counter for a second while I was gone and as I descended the stairs I watched in slow motion as my heart, my breath bounced himself off that countertop and onto the tile floor still in his seat and with it landing on top of him. Part of me left in that moment. Perhaps this sounds dramatic, but I can honestly say I have not gotten that piece back. I have looked for it since, but it left that day. I don’t remember a lot after that. Yelling maybe, agony, me lying under his crib, crucifying myself for my negligence, his vomiting, lethargy, sitting in an ambulance, the young EMT holding my hand as my husband filled out paperwork. The young man who looked into my eyes and must have seen that I was not okay, who gave me his card in case I needed to talk. The helicopter descending because the ambulance would have been too slow, the stuffed alligator I placed onto the gurney, the deflation of emotion as I was told I could not fly with him, kneeling in the grass because I was unable to stand, watching him fly away not knowing if I would see him ever again, knowing I had broken my child. Then there was the man who appeared off the sidewalk and sat by me, the same man who asked me if that baby was my son, the same man who told me as I willed my head up and down, that my baby would be okay and then was not beside me anymore.
We broke every speed law and reached Primary Children’s in eight minutes from
Over time, there has been more than a few nights I have wept wondering if someone else should have mothered these children, someone less quick to anger, someone more patient and whose constant mistakes aren’t on full display day after day. My son and I have had the opportunity to discuss forgiveness, repentance, and the Atonement. He is well aware of my shortcomings and we have had some very frank and deep doctrinal conversations.
Back to where I began. That night as my son whispered to his sister, that they needed to be quiet, I stopped and it hit me like a ton of bricks. I would not go to where I had planned to go. How could I leave my children with a stressed out cranky mommy and go somewhere with others who would get my best. The ones I love the most dearly need my best. They need my best all the time. Sometimes I am going to stumble and because of that I can’t afford to be distracted. It’s just too easy to get distracted.
There are times I lose focus. How can I ever forget that my greatest joys are in the walls of my own home? That NOTHING else matters as much, that NOTHING I will EVER do is as important as what I am doing every day, albeit imperfectly.
The Lord blessed my son and through the Atonement I was finally able to forgive myself for being gone even for a minute when he fell, and through the Atonement I can keep trying to stay focused on what’s most important in the here and now and forgive myself for not being the perfect strong mommy that I want to be. It is only by clinging to my Savior that I can be the mommy that HE would have me be. And in nothing is my weakness made more manifest than as I strive in my roles as wife and mother. And that’s proof enough for me that nothing’s of greater value.
We liked conference. Here’s proof. And here’s to taking this mommy thing one day at a time…
16 comments:
Oh, wow, what a scary moment, Rachel. Thank goodness for miracle.
Wow. I am sitting here crying my eyes out. I have such similar feelings about being a mother. I have a bad temper and feel like I am screaming all of the time. You are SO right--the need the best me. Thank you for this post Rachel!!
I definitely hold my children a little closer and dearer to my heart now after our recent loss.
When my second son was just a few months old he wiggled right out of his baby seat from the kitchen counter onto the linoleum. He was alright but I understand your feelings completely!
Rachel, this post is amazing. I feel better hearing that others struggle in the ways that I do. Your ability to also make me really see how I need to improve is amazing. Your writing is amazing.
Thank you.
(And wow, to the scary story. Our hearts do go walking around outside our bodies, don't they?)
I read this right after reading your April submission.
You have such perfection in expressing your truths and universal truths.
Thank you for being a writer.
One of my favorite posts! And I am so glad you had a happy ending:)
Amen Rachel.
Thanks for sharing your story, Rachel. I'm glad everything is working out. =)
Oh---did you speak all my feelings of mommying or what!?!? I felt those exact things tonight and I've given myself a million lectures on how to be better. Thanks for sharing this!! Glad your boy is okay! You're such an awesome mom AND I MEAN IT!!! :)
And I just loved the video at the bottom with the ever increasingly large circles. :) Here's to dizzy.
What a story! Wow. Thank you for sharing.
Don't you think distractions are a part of this mortal experience? I wonder if we will deal with them for eternity.
I know that we all are struggling with staying focused on what is real and what is immediately important.
I think I heard you say in your story that we need to be less critical of ourselves and allow the attonement heal our weak things. I could not agree more. May God bless us all and may his children thrive in our care.
All the while we get to enjoy our journey here experiencing all that we can.
Well written. I would love to read your journal. I have tried to read mine but there is no emotion in it. I guess I need to keep practicing.
Wow! I didn't know about that! What a horrible moment and yet what an amazing spiritual experience because of it!
That was a beautifully written story!
I think sometimes we are harder on ourselves than anyone else would ever dream of being! Thanks for the great reality check, and the sweet reminder that our kids really are more important than anything else 'out there'. Love you!
Time to blog again Rachel. Really.
This brought tears to my eyes. Thank you for the essential reminders you wrote about here. I really needed them.
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