Tuesday, December 18, 2012

B.M.W.B #51 - The Words We Shall Not Speak

This week has been the worst some families will ever experience. There are families (not just in the USA but this is in my heart and tears) that have lost little ones.... ones they love like I love my boys.

I have been thinking so much about these families - the searing loss, the aching and I so recognise how easy it is to respond in fear. To worry for my children, for the people who inhabit the world they are growing into, to fear the diseases, the dangers, the predators..... but even though that might motivate me (for a time) to love and cherish my children more it is not where I want to parent from.

Fear

Obligation

Guilt

These are the words I want to banish from my parenting. These words, their feelings, the actions they motivate - these are not the mama I want to become. 

Fear, when we allow it to set up camp - controls us, it robs us, it makes us cling to children where we should be throwing them in the air, cheering at their attempts to learn new skills, it makes us hold them back from the world they need to experience (I'm not talking about unsafe risks, I'm talking about the joys - and sometimes pains - of being a child). Too many children in many places are robbed of their chance to experience childhood, skinned knees and all. I will not let my fear rob my children of their opportunity.

Obligation - along with its long-suffering companion the heavy sigh - is robbing mama's of being the mama they long to be. So busy having to do this, should be doing that, ought to have done....... maybe it's abandoning the home baking this week, or leaving the dishes in the sink or 'forgetting' homework for a night. Parenting out of obligation just leads done a very slippery slope to resentment. It does mean the physical needs are met but don't for a second be fooled that an obliged parent is giving or receiving joy from her family.

Guilt - I have made mistakes, my parents have made mistakes and their parents before them too. If I focus on these I spend so much time in 'self-improving/being trapped in a cycle of regret/ not doing it the way my parents did it' that I take my eyes off the goal - this moment, this experience, this opportunity to laugh or cry, this chance to skip down the road. Guilt traps us in the past. I want to parent right here, today, in this moment.

I love this quote - it reminds me I want people to treat my children with a fresh slate each day and I too need to start each parenting day with a fresh slate too.



So what words shall we speak of?

Joy

Celebration

Future

It is a joy to have my boys. A joy not allowed to everyone who longs to parent. I will enjoy this moment. This mess that speaks of a home inhabited by small children. Joy in the noise that demonstrates children relaxed, children expressive, children who do not have to silence their thoughts. I will lie in bed at the end of the day and thank God with joy for the minutes, days and years I have been given with these boys so far.

Celebration - every day is a gift. I am not promised tomorrow for myself or my boys and so I will celebrate today.

Future - I will parent with the future in mind. With my hopes for men who will be filled with compassion and strength. Men who will be generous in their actions, their laughter, their friendships. Because while I choose and hope to dwell right here in this moment I am also growing men. For me this is like stopping to smell the roses - looking at the delicate buds, marveling at the flowers but remembering to water that same plant because I hope it will bloom for a good many years more.

This week I started teaching my biggest boy to sew (he made a Christmas gift for his brother) and I sat in the sandpit (in my Sunday dress and 'pearls') with my littlest boy. Because I enjoy them, because they make every day worth celebrating, because they are without a doubt the best thing I have to invest my life into for every single day we have one another.

(I realise this is like the longest post ever pretty much I've written it for me.... but I'd be stoked if it encouraged you too)


This year I am making more of a conscious effort to have quality moments with my boys. B.M.W.B (becoming the mama I want to be)  is my way of recording and hopefully inspiring other mama’s too. 
 Simple. Achievable. Intentional: becoming the mama I want to be.
I'd love you to link in your parenting posts/activities this week....

9 comments:

Sophie Slim said...

I struggle with this concept, in light of whats going on. sometimes it feels to focus on the positive means to ignore the negative and hurt. but you're right. living in a place of fear and control does us no good. i like joy celebration and future :)

Max said...

Lovely miriam, just lovely. Sniff. x

Leonie said...

Wonderful post and you have expressed perfectly the thoughts and feelings ive been having since Saturdays terrible news. Not to be a reactive parent but proactive, always. Mistakes are just that - mistakes. Tomorrow is always a new day and a new opportunity. Above all i become more grateful for the blessings bestowed upon us and more determined to be the mum i want to be for my girls. Love this post xx

Julie - Slice in the Life of Julie said...

Beautifully written!!

Miriam said...

I feel constantly challenged about how I can alleviate the pain and suffering of so many children in the world. There are days I feel bad for the free tap water we have such easy access to. I will continue asking God how I can make choices to help with that

Miriam said...

oh Max... thank you so much

Miriam said...

thank you - it's always, always my challenge too :o)

Miriam said...

Thanks Julie x

Deb Robertson Writes said...

I missed this post while I was away. It's so hard to put into words how we feel about this and to work out how to act with it in mind. I love your take on it, very very positive from such an ugly situation.