Posts Tagged: stay at home mom


23
Oct 08

Regaining Purpose in Life

The past couple of weeks, I’ve been in such a slump.  It may have been partly to do with the fact that I silently endured a nasty cold and worried to pieces that Jack-Evan would get sick.  Consequently, I began having nightmares at night – something that hasn’t really happened since the end of my pregnancy. 

Anyway, I began to feel disgusted with the day to day monotony of staying at home.  I mean, don’t get me wrong – I adore being a mother and being “free” from a job – but lately, a part of me began to feel useless because my efforts are no longer earning the cold, hard cash. 

I know, I know.  Home-making for a family is a very high calling and a wonderful duty bestowed upon us females.  I’ve read all the encouraging blogs and all of the “you can do it!” homemaking books.

But sometimes, the old feminist cultural mantras that somehow seeped into me as a teen will remind me of how much earning power I have in the business world.  Then, I’ll begin to wrestle with whether we’ve made the right decision for our family.  More money would do us good right now and remove that last bit of debt we’ve been hauling around the past 2 years.  It would mean our cars would be paid off within a few months, a lot more luxuries, more vacations, and more Sears portrait sessions followed by Starbucks cappucinos.

I know, I know. 

All of those are “materialistic” wants, money is not important, our family is who truly needs us, etc.  Yet, in the real world – the moments when we’re silently staring at the dog hair wafting slowly towards the red carpet that has already been vaccuumed 20 times this week – thoughts of abandoning the stay at home lifestyle do creep in.  And I’ve got enough guts to admit it too (unlike some of those blogs out there who make us feel like we should choose to be joyful at all times, under all conditions no matter what). 

And what may sound strange, is that I convinced myself that those feelings of wanting to return to the working world had to do with whether our lifestyle choice was the best possible one for our family. 

Many questions kept circulating through my head….. Will I be able to impart on Jack-Evan that love and relationships should take precedent over materialistic goods?  Or will he grow up with a subconcious bitterness that his parents were unable to afford things he wanted?  Am I prepared to watch my child “do without” or will a part of me yearn to spoil him with a room full of toys and gadgets as my parents did me?  Will I be able to handle the thought that Disney World may not be in the near future for my children?  As much as I dote on Jack, will I be able to say no with a clear concious when he begs for something I know a paycheck I earn could purchase for him?   Those questions sound silly when put in writing -especially since others have such straitforward black & white answers for them- but they’re very real feelings that I’ve been wrestling with as a parent. 

And besides, now that I’ve had a taste of bringing in a solid paycheck with all of it’s perks, it creates quite a dissonance when I’m scrubbing our toilets day after day.

So those were my thoughts this past month.  With plans of homeschooling Jack-Evan and being a long term full-time stay-at-home mom, it was bound to happen that the “but look at your earning power!” train of thought would try to take ahold of me.  And I almost succumbed to those terrible materialistic feelings. Almost.

A part of me even begun to feel like I was running around endlessly with no purpose in life.

Finally, the other night, I let everything out and used Kevin’s shoulder to bawl my eyes out on.  Thankfully he’s a terrific listener and doesn’t mind a wet sleeve. :)   He only needed to ask me a few questions to turn my heart around, back to where it should be -

“Do you truly want to go back to work?  If so, then you know you can, if that will make you happy. But, in the meantime, are you prepared for our son to end up accidentally calling a babysitter Mama?  In the end, do you really want to miss his first steps?  Do you really want to return to the stress of the business world?  Are you prepared to let someone else take over parenting our baby for more than 1/3rd of the day?”

His questioning and our subsequent conversation made me realize that what I was truly letting depress me was the skewed longing for abstract luxury, and the sinful jealousy that comes with that longing.  And furthermore, I realized that no, work was not what would make me happy.  What makes me happy is spending my days caring for my family and living a life free from constraints of a 9-5 job.  What makes me happy is waking up every morning and knowing that should anyone I love need me, I can be there in a moment’s notice.  What makes me truly happy is knowing that I am focusing all of my attention on nurturing a young life that will extend beyond my own, and affect future generations to come. 

No one will ever be able to raise my child like I do.  He is part of me, and I am part of him.  Kevin and I are the only people alive who truly have his best interests in mind along with the means to accomplish that vision.  No one can take the place of a mother in Jack’s life, and it has always been mine and Kevin’s intentions of ensuring that as a mother, I would be there 100% of the time as our children grow up.  It may not be a suitable choice for others, and various families may have differeing priorities – but for us, it’s our #1 priority.

When did I begin to lose sight of all that? 

I guess it was the moment I vaccuumed up the dog hair the 21st time that day and turned around to 5 baskets of laundry that needed to be put away.  Sometimes housework just seems so unforgiving!

But I’m back to my old self now.  Isn’t it wonderful what sharing a burden with someone you love – and with whom you have a common goal – will do for you?  Speaking my fears aloud to Kevin, gave me the courage to stamp out those feelings that were trying to destroy the life we are working together to acheive.

Were those feelings of wanting to return to work wrong?  No.  Being a woman with a career is not wrong if it is part of your family’s overall plan.  Were those feelings of wanting to lavish material goods on my child wrong?  No.  Every parent wants to give their child gifts and see excitement in their faces when they behold a new toy.  But for us – for our family and the lifestyle we want to create together and shelter our family under – the feelings were wrong.  Putting our child in a daycare and everything else that comes along with a dual-career family lifestyle would be as wrong for us as it would be if we were to actually beat our child….it’s just something we’d never consider doing as long as we’re healthy & able.

Anyway, so that uplifting conversation with Kevin took place over the weekend, and this week has felt so refreshing.  It seems like there is a renewed vigor between both of us in living the lifestyle we’ve chosen.  Yesterday, I even repainted our entire hallway, put on a new couch slipcover with a bit of luxury money we’d saved, and repaired the vacuum.  (Ok, ok…I’ll admit..Kevin repaired the vaccuum.  I just watched from far, far away). 

 Other odd jobs I’ve accomplished this week include cleaning & fully organizing Jack’s closet (all the way up to storing some 4T size clothes he’s been gifted!) and hanging some large picture frames I never quite got around to hanging.  All of that was done in the midst of regular home duties, nursing, and playing with Jack-Evan. 

And it was done with cheerful classical music playing in the background and candles burning.  Just like the home-making blogs suggest we do.  (I was barefoot though!  FlyLady would steal my feather duster if she knew).   :)

It feels so vigorating when you remember your “purpose” in life.


6
Oct 08

What does “Homemade Meals” mean to you??

Ok.  There seems to be a rash of “realness” coming out in many mommy bloggers.  You see, there are a few (and one especially well known) home making blogs where the authors present themselves to be the perfect wife, mom, teacher, homemaker, etc.  In a turning of the tide movement, mommies every where seem to be coming out of the woodworks to show how UNperfect their life really is at certain moments.

And you know what?  It’s a breath of fresh air to see another homemaking blogger let down her pretenses and show what her house is truly like amidst the daily coming and goings of family life.  You see….sometimes, a dedicated stay-at-home mom (or any mom, for that matter!!) can get so caught up in wanting to be a “super-woman” that they feel crushed if they’re are unable to maintain a perfectly clean home and perfectly behaved children.  Reading blogs where other mommies seem to have it ALL together doesn’t help matters any either.  It can make us feel (in worst case scenarios) like jumping in our 3 day old pile of laundry and hiding with our store bought tide.

So with that in mind, I was thinking of something else that I’ve wondered about.  (Brace yourself…I’m gonna “be real”, real quick).

In today’s health concious society, “homemade meals” are all the rage, right?  Cooking at home is purpoted to be the best invention since sliced (homemade) bread.

Now, I’m not sure about you guys, but growing up, “Homemade meals” in my parent’s house meant just that – meals that were made at home.  Whether that meant opening cans, dumping out a quick box of Kraft Mac & Cheese for lunch, or rolling out some pillsbury pie crusts, didn’t matter.  Homemade was anything cooked at home. I never even thought to question this!  Mom would often say “this is cooked from scratch” – and we’d laugh and say “who scratched it??”, to which she’d simply reply “The Jolly Green Giant” or “Campbells”.   And it worked great for us.  The food tasted terrific, it was made with love, and it guided me right on up into a pretty healthy adulthood life.  Therefore, it never occured to me that there was a whole other attitute towards homemade meals….an attitute that scoffed at homemade meals that weren’t completely made from HOME scratch.  I am finding this particular attitude more and more in various books I read or blogs I encounter.  I sometimes even get the impression from many blogs that one should never even buy store bought canned goods!  That was quite a shocker to me when I first started researching on how to fill a home pantry. 

Does anyone out there truly NOT buy canned goods??  Canned goods, to me, are quintessential.  Pork & Beans, french cut string beans, cream corn, canned peaches, cream of mushroom…. most cans cost less than 60 cent per can, so they’re not really that expensive.  And I’m not sure if I’m reading right, but when I look at the ingredients of a can of string beans, all I ever see is “String Beans, Water” (maybe “Salt” on some?).  Nothing funky, right?  I LOVE canned foods, and I’m not sure if I could survive daily cooking without them.  And the occassional can of pineapple is auyummi.

But when I read some homemaking advice books / blogs, I get the impression that I “should” feel inadequate because I’m not growing my own lima beans, preserving my own vine grown tomatoes, shaving the corn off of the cob myself, or chopping my organic farmer’s market mustard greens.  Since when did the cook at home movement become the “cook-only-from-organic-scratch-or-your-family-isn’t-being-well-fed” movement???  

So anyway…what I’m getting at (I can be quite long winded) is this….

Does anyone else besides myself still find “cooking from pure scratch” a novelty that just doesn’t fit into every day life?? What does “Homemade Meals” mean to YOU??

Sometimes I wonder if there are hoards of people out there cooking from scratch and laughing at my Jolly Green Giant loving self, or if these homemaking blogs present only an ideal that really isn’t followed by that many people.  I mean, c’mon people…opening a ready-made can or two for dinner side dish is, to me, a time-saving, awesome modern luxury that is well worth the “less than a buck per can” cost.  I also love me a 33 cent box of Great Value Mac & Cheese with Campbells Tomato Soup on the side once in a while.  (Isn’t that sooo UN-PC??) 

Other things I hear society “telling us” about eating, but I don’t go for, are….

 ~ “Everything tastes better if homemade”.  I don’t agree.  Little Debbie can make a better swiss roll than I can any day, Starbucks just has some major mojo goin’ on in the coffee arena, homemade tortillas tastes exactly the same irregardless of who makes them, Pillsbury chocolate chip cokies are beyond awesome, and Heinz can ketchup my fries any day.  I know many things contain some supposedly bad-for-you preservatives, but I’d bet my dollar bill that a company who cooks up millions of the exact same foods daily – and sells them – has found a winning recipe that you probably haven’t.  Just because something is “company made” doesn’t make it less tasteworthy than it’s homemade counterpart.

~ “Go Organic, or Die!”   Maybe it’s because I dislike fads, but everyone’s fascination with organic this, and organic that just bugs me.  Or perhaps maybe it’s because my wallet dislikes seeing one product for $3, and the same size product in organic for $6.  So I’m supposed to choose between eating “organic” and thus starving because I can’t afford much…or eating non-organic and dying a slow, miserable death from pesticide poisoning??  I dunno.  I’m just not all that convinced that the non-organic milk I’ve been drinking for 25 years now is suddenly killing me. 

…..which brings me to….

~ ”Choices, choices, for one and all!”   Why, oh why do we have so many choices for anything and everything??  Why can’t flour be flour and sugar be sugar and rice be rice?  Just give me a barrel to tote it out in. 

Anyway.  I’m not suggesting in any way that one should eat nothing but storebought items.  I myself do cook from scratch occassionally, and shop our local farmers market frequently (because it’s cheaper).  It’s just that I view eating and meal preparation like the Greeks suggest….”Do all things in moderation”.

So anywho.

That’s my bit of “realness” for today.  Although I do love cooking “homemade meals”, I rarely scratch them myself because I am a can-buying, non-organic, choice-denying, boxed mac&cheese lover. 

(Would you like fries with that?) :)

hrmph.


28
Jan 08

Ode to the Laundry Fairy

I love writing.  I love writing poems even better!  The sillier they are, the more I like them.  I guess it stems from all the books my mom use to read to me when I was little….the rhyming, the meter, everything about a poem just makes me all bubbly inside.

There is a joke in my family stemming back from the moment I first got married that I now had to do my own laundry (I sadly admit that before marriage I was one of those lucky spoiled ones who still lived at home and “momma did it for me”).  She was a stay-at-home mom and enjoyed taking care of us.   Unfortunately, I never gave the laundry a second thought back then.   It was always just as if my clothes somehow magically cleaned themselves.  After marriage, months and months passed before I got the hang of doing not only my laundry, but my husbands large, filthy, stinky, mud crusted work clothes as well.  Ewww….and don’t get me started on mud-crusty balled up size 13 men’s socks.  I hated it with a passion!!   “Where is my little laundry fairy??” I would often cry.

This poem just popped outta me today (yeh, yeh, I’m good like that) and I thought I would post it.

(By the way, I still dream of the day when I can have my own Laundry Fairy again though.)


It’s Monday morning,
In your newlywed life,
You sit up in bed,
And think “I’m a wife!”

Over in the corner,
Wait….what do you see?
16 pairs of pants
And 32 Tees!

But they are all dirty,
Covered with filth.
(Where is that fairy?!)
Now you’re feelin’ some guilt.

Your husband is yellin’
There’s nothin to wear!
But he hasn’t helped,
So why should you care?!

You look out the window
For her glittering wings
While your laundry lays limp,
Growing the grossest of things.

When you were younger,
She was always around,
Pickin’ up and cleaning
Your clothes from the ground.

But where is she now,
That darn laundry fairy?
You never suspected she’d
Disappear when you married!

As the weeks passed,
The piles grew and grew
Till you both were down
To your last underroo.

You finally call mom
To ask what has happened;
But get very discouraged
When she starts a laughin’.

Sweet daughter, she chimes
Why, didn’t you know?
She’s there with you now,
And she’s ready to go!

I don’t understand!
You miserably sigh,
I’m looking around
But see only my guy!

Well go to the bathroom
And here’s what you’ll see…
Staring back from that mirror
Is your new Laundry Fairy!


(Send this poem to a friend!)

Poem Copyright © 1-28-2008, Lisa,  from Little Jack’s Corner