These are the days so looooong that it’s hard to
understand why some say the years fly by.
These are the diaper days and bedtime battle
nights.
These days that blur together because the
nursings and nightmares leave but moments chopped together to make up a mama’s sleep.
These are the shouting days where you scream
right back and then cry in pained shame because you know two wrongs don’t teach
what’s right.
These days filled with too many “No’s” and “Don’t
touch that’s” to keep track.
These are the days where you need two extra eyes
and four extra arms so you can feed the baby while you make spaghetti and fix
the Lego masterpiece that the Evil Emperor Zurg just destroyed.
These are the days of endless snack fixing, spill-proof
sippy cup spill cleaning, crumb sweeping, and exhausted weeping.
These days when getting sick feels cosmically
unfair because kids aren’t a file that can wait on your desk or a project you
can pass off. Because somehow you signed the 24/7 contract with no time off allotted as the CEO of your kids who need to run, play, eat, bathe, every day, round the clock whether you’re
throwing up or not.
These are the days where your body is not your
own. It’s the baby’s nourishment and the toddler’s comfort and the preschooler’s
jungle gym, but it’s still soft and squishy because there’s no time to
entertain actually going to a real gym.
These are the days.
These days where going to the grocery store or
the bathroom alone feels like a
luxury.
These days where all the love and the need and
the whining and the training make you feel like you can barely breathe.
Yes, these are those days.
But they are also these days…
Yes, these are those days.
But they are also these days…
These are the days where you are a little person’s world. The prettiest, smartest, grandest thing they’ve ever seen and every day dream to be.
These are the days where they fight over who
gets to sit next to you in the restaurant booth and want to show you twenty
times the empty spot from their first lost tooth.
These are the days of tickle wars and endless kisses,
of hugs tight around your neck and “I miss you, Mommy!” wishes.
These are the days that they actually want to hear you sing, to hold your
hand, and gently twirl your diamond ring.
These are the days where hot chocolate and mini
marshmallows make you the all time greatest hero. You, the Princess, the Mommy
Queen.
These days where their eyes light up over dragonflies and kitty cats, bubblegum treats and cheesy goldfishes.
These days where their eyes light up over dragonflies and kitty cats, bubblegum treats and cheesy goldfishes.
These are the days where you can squeeze their
tiny buns and stroke their satin pillow cheeks, where you can learn the curve
of their eyelashes by heart and watch their chest rise and fall while they
sleep.
These are the days where your kisses have magic
healing powers and little faces plaster mesmerized out the window at God’s drip-drop
showers.
These are the days where finding worms and spotting rainbows are amazing feats to be applauded.
These days where you are the only one they want when they get teased, or poked, or prodded.
These are the long and trying and precious, time-flying days.
These days I far too often want to wish away.
But then I STOP.
And see.
SEE THE GIFTS ALL AROUND ME. And I want to
unwrap them slowly and savor each sweet and sticky, salty nape neck, summer
buzz cut moment before it slips away.
I want to laugh over lips dripping with watermelon juice. Memorize each sun-kissed freckle and the coconut smell of sunscreen on skin ready to jump out, run free.
I want to laugh over lips dripping with watermelon juice. Memorize each sun-kissed freckle and the coconut smell of sunscreen on skin ready to jump out, run free.
I don’t want to dread the long of these days
that I miss out on the delight.
I don’t want to stay stuck in the haze that I
miss out on being amazed.
I don’t want the pain and drain to be my main
refrain.
I don’t want to erase these days when I could
embrace these days.
These are the days that won’t last forever. (No
days ever do.)
And I don’t think we’re meant to throw them
away. Bemoan them away.
Yes, they are hard. I’m the first to raise my
hand and say it!
Let our children know that THEY are JOY. THEY
are GIFT.
Let’s make sure that these days don’t pass slow or fast without making SURE our children know that IN THEM their God and their Mama take great delight.
* * *
Joining Jennifer's beautiful community to #TellHisStory and Angie's sweet Inspire Me Monday.
4 comments:
This was a beautiful post of the mixture of motherhood. It is true! The time seems so long and yet it will be gone in a blink. Cherish all of it. Your children are precious. I enjoyed this post and your heart was so evident. Glad to stop in and get to know you a little.
I love everything about this.
I call my girls my jewels!
Hi Becky,
Nice to see you again. :) I'm hopping over from Ann's link up. Yes, those days can be long but you are right, they are so precious too, and they pass quickly! As a friend of mine says, "The days are long, but the years are short."
Mine are 19, 15 and 5 yrs old now and I still savor them.
Have a great week,
Jennifer Dougan
www.jenniferdougan.com
What a beautiful post, Becky! I once lived 'those' days and now my little boys are young men at the ages of 22 and 19. I remember saying to me when I was in the middle of those days to enjoy every moment because they would be gone before I knew it...and she was right.
Some days now, it feels as if I blinked and in place of those two little tow-haired boys who clamored for my attention, now stands two young men busy with their own lives, yet fortunately, still needing me once in a while.
Blessings to you through all 'these' days...may you enjoy every single moment.
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