I wrote the following letter to an actual woman in my
life. She and I have had many
conversations over the last few weeks about her longing for a baby. I've shared many thoughts that she finds helpful in her attempt to wait patiently without succumbing to depression, but
ultimately, I can't fix this struggle for her.
It's a battle she will face repeatedly, as we all do, and wrestle with on her own and
find her own way through it. But my
heart goes out to her. I was in her
shoes for 10 years of waiting and wanting a baby. I want to try to ease her burden as much as I
can. I communicate my heart best through writing, so I put these words to paper
for her and for all the women in her shoes I've talked to over the last 10
years.
I also wrote it for myself.
I wrote it to help me remember not to look back with longing to my
former life without children, or look forward to my future life when they are
grown, but to live in the present moment, fully thankful, fully joyful, fully
fulfilled. This truth applies to every person, in every situation, in all walks of life.
Dear Friend, Sister, Colleague, and Woman passing me in
Walmart,
You see me and you desire what I have. I'm not going to lie. My life is blessed. It's not wrong to desire what I have. I have two adorable little girls who offer
joy every day, whether I see it and enjoy it or not. I want you to have what I have. Children are a delight. My life is charming in so many ways. I have a roof over my head, food on my table
and three people in my household who love me, not to mention your love for me
and the love I feel from at least a hundred friends around the world.
You see me and desire what I have, and it's hard for you to
grasp why my life is so challenging for me at times. You can't fathom why I
would have any reason to curl up in a ball on the closet floor occasionally and
cry my heart out just exactly like you do occasionally.
You see me and desire what I have, so I'm going to try to
paint a better picture of exactly what it is I have.....
I am 150% thankful for this life and the babies in it. I wouldn't change a thing. The reason I am
agonized, at times, is because I have a high standard for wanting to live my
life to the best of my ability and do a good job with what I have been given. I
want to fully enjoy my babies while they are little before it's too late and I
don't want to waste a minute. It stresses me out every time a well meaning stranger says in passing, "Enjoy every minute... they grow up too fast." I do have many glorious moments of enjoying them.
But it's just not humanly possible for every moment to feel glorious. Many
times the exhaustion is overwhelming and it's not possible to fully appreciate the
babies in those moments. This reality is a grief to me, but nothing can be done
about it. This is the plight of motherhood. The act of being a mother is
primarily a sacrificial gift of love. Love for the children you are raising and
love for all the people who will be blessed by them. God's primary purpose in giving us children is
not for personal gratification. However, for mothers who are blessed with wisdom and
vision, those mothers can see that it is more blessed to give than to receive.
This is the truth that can sustain us in the many, many hard moments. Yes,
there are many.
Yet, fortunately, there are also many moments of sheer
delight and joy and personal fulfillment in the act of being a mother. It's an
added bonus.
I'm an idealist, so I have unrealistic expectations that
tell me that if I am doing everything correct, and am the best mother I
can be, all moments will feel glorious and wonderful at all times. This is just not true. I
know you are an idealist too, so I know you are likely to face this same
challenge when you become a mother.
In those moments when things are HARD, I feel guilty because
they are hard. I make it EVEN MORE HARD on myself by thinking it's my fault and
if I was just a better mother, this would be easier. Certainly there are times when I make things
harder than they need to be with my shortcomings. But there are plenty of times
when I have the right attitude and I'm doing everything right and it is still
just plain HARD.
When we are in a season of infertility or when we are
intentionally waiting to have children, many of us women look at mothers with
babies and we want their life, not because we are eager to sacrifice our lives
for others, but because we think their life would be more fun than the life we
are currently living. And when we hear that those mothers are struggling, we
think that they must not be grateful enough for what they have. I admit,
certainly there's the occasional ungrateful mother out there, but I highly
suspect that most mothers are like me..... SO grateful that they want to do the
best job possible and they are beating themselves up trying to do just that.
And if you're a good mom, you are going to do the same thing when it's your
turn.
So try to stop beating yourself up now, thinking your life
isn't full enough now. Try to see your life now and your future life raising
babies, not as two separate lives, but as one life. If babies are in your future, you are already
making sacrifices for those babies right now and preparing yourself to be a
better mother when they come. The life
experiences you are living now are preparing you for whatever unique challenges
you will face in your own private walk as a mother. If you get used to and
embrace sacrifice now, it won't be as rude an awakening when sacrifice is an
unavoidable reality during motherhood.
So please continue to dream, continue to look forward to the
arrival of a baby. Don't shut your
emotions off to protect yourself from the pain of waiting, as I did. Keep longing, keep desiring, keep waiting so
that when your dreams finally do come true, you will be open, ready and excited
to receive. But wait with more awareness
of what lies ahead, both the joy and the heartache. Enjoy your current season of life so that you
don't look back and feel you wasted it by pining away for the future. I have to do the same thing right now. I have to discipline my mind regularly,
telling it to stay in the present moment and not pine away for a future of
grown children that will come all too quickly.
If you learn to stay in the present moment now, you'll be better
prepared to stay in the present moment and enjoy as much as possible when your
glorious babies do come.
This truth applies to every person, in all situations, in all walks of life.