I always wanted to be the kind of mom who made the coolest lunches for her kids and put them in fancy lunch boxes and included a hand written note for them. But, truthfully, I’m just not. I’m okay with being the mom that gets up at 6:50 am and races to pack a lunch and sometimes pops microwave popcorn and puts it in plastic baggies because we don’t have much else to put in for the snack and gets extra cheers because I let them put in a piece of Halloween candy.
I always wanted my kids rooms look like little mini IKEA or Pottery Barn display rooms. Heck. I’d be grateful with Target decor at this point. But, truthfully, their rooms are a hodgepodge of garage sale finds, hand me downs, Target clearance, and the rare cool IKEA item. Which, most of the time breaks, but that’s for a different post. But their rooms are theirs with marker on the wall and stuffed animals and posters that are ripped in the corner and toys that they love.
I always wanted to take my kids to Disney World and to get the funny Mickey Ears and do all the rides and take them on a plane and stay in a hotel and swim. But, truthfully, that just hasn’t ever happened. Ever. But they do get a week at the lake in an old cabin that sits on the edge of the water and no agenda and time with me just playing cards and fishing and getting sunburnt noses and a eating a whole bunch of junk food.
I always wanted to have that super organized house with cool spaces for everything and the trendiest furniture and that it was always clean. But, very truthfully, I don’t. But then I went to Haiti and met women who had dirt for their floors and windows with no screens and they never told me they were sorry for their space but instead welcomed me in with open arms and served food on mismatched plates and we ate with our fingers and I felt more welcomed in their homes with little than I have in homes with much.
I always wanted to be the kind of parent who never got exasperated with her kids and had the cool incentive charts and kids that never fought. But truthfully, I that’s not me. In fact just tonight there was screaming because the five year old wanted to get in the nine year old’s room and I was so sick and tired of it and knock it off guys which I yelled upstairs because I was so sick and tired of going up the stairs telling them to knock it off guys. But they still loved me and gave me a hug at night.
I always wanted to have the idyllic American family with Thanksgivings around the table and Christmas lights twinkling outside and family meals and to have people think I was like June Cleaver but just a bit trendier and with my black knee high boots. But, humbly and truthfully, I don’t. I have a life where it’s just me and I’m the single mom and I work hard and yet my kids love me deeply and I’ve found that there can be joy in a life that doesn’t seem to match up with the Currier and Ives ideal.
You know what?
Life happened.
I’m okay with me.
I’m okay with having a messed up not perfect crazy life. I’m okay with the fact that the baristas at Starbucks (who I love) and I are practically relatives now. I’m okay with my house looking like it’s lived in and that right now there is a half finished puzzle on my living room floor and a lunch box left in the corner and that my laundry is always behind except for the days before vacation or when I’ve had enough. I’m okay with my kids going to the store in mismatched shoes sometimes and mismatched gloves all of the time. I’m okay if I go out to the grocery store in yoga pants and a pony tail and I run into somebody that I know (because we know that that happens every single time) and I look like I just finished mowing the yard because I probably just did.
I’m okay with being real.
I’m tired of the facades.
I’m tired of thinking that the only way to have a successful life is to actually complete the 4983 projects on my Pinterest boards. I’m tired of thinking that I don’t measure up because we lost the math homework again (see this post). I’m tired of expectations that I put on myself that are much too hard. I’m tired of worrying that because they had antibiotics when they were three their guts are messed up or that because we didn’t start baseball at age four that they can never play or that bad days define motherhood or that well, you know, all the worries and stuff that we’re told as moms every single day.
So I’m telling you.
I’m happy to be me.
And I want that for you too.
I want you to look at what you always wanted in life and to not just stop with I always wanted but to finish it with the beautiful rest of your story. Yes, sure it probably doesn’t look anything close to your I always wanted part. But truth?
It’s your story.
Don’t discount your story if it doesn’t match the always wanted part.
Do you know why?
Because at the end of our days we will look at the second half of those messy stories of ours and we will see the feistiness, the tenacity, the creative parts, and the part of us that was determined to find joy. You will see your beauty and strength and how much you deeply loved your family even though so many times you thought they were going to make you crazy. You will see how the walks in the park holding hands were so more important than all those places you wanted to go.
You will see that your kids and your family simply loved you.
Not all the things you always wanted.
But you.
Broken, imperfect, beautiful, trying you.
Don’t discount your story.
It may end up being exactly what you always wanted.
~Rachel
28 comments
The only thing I really want to do is do painting and arts projects with my kids after school but homework and cooking happen and we cannot. But my kids still think I am an artist. That’s what they say to other adults 🙂
Other than that, I am happy with my messy, uncoordinated, hurried self and family.
Thank you for your reminders. They have been filling my heart with reassurance and in perfect timing.
You are so right, I lost my mom three weeks ago and the last thing I told her was, I love you. She didn’t get everything right, she wasn’t perfect. Yet I miss her so much my heart just breaks everyday. Thank you again for reminding us that it is okay to be real. My kids don’t have the perfect mom, yet they are loved. You lift me up every time I read your blog.
Rachel. Thank you. The voices in my head have been trying to convince me this week that I’m a bad housewife cause the bathrooms aren’t clean; a bad wife because I ask for help; and a bad mom because I, too, am constantly yelling for the boys to “knock it off, guys”…
But none of that is true. And I need to give myself grace. Especially this week as I am in the aftermath of a lost pregnancy. That sadness is all pervasive.
And so today I will hug my kids, and let the laundry pile up. Cause you’re right– when I look back on my life, I will remember the little moments, not the Pinterest projects.
rachel, you have no idea how much I needed to hear this today. Every. Single. Bit.
Thank you for reminding me of what really matters, and now my kids won’t be messed up for life just because I’m me! Ugh! The guilt I can carry with me when I see all the failures is so overwhelming, and yet, there’s such freedom in being me! Your words are such a blessing to me! Thank you!
Thank you Rachel. Thank you, thank you.
I started suffering with severe depression when I was just 6 years old, which has been with me for most of my life so far. When I was about 10 or 11 my Mum asked me what I wanted to be when I was older… I said “happy”. It’s still my “I always wanted to…” It’s not much of a goal, but since having my little girl I achieve it most days. Nothing else matters as long as we are healthy and happy.
Sweet Hannah — thank you for writing me. I pray today you are happy and you have moments of joy.
~Rachel
Beautifully written. Inspiring, thank you. No matter what we are going through, as Moms, it means the world to know that we are not alone. You are a blessing.
Thank you.
Thank you. Needed that today. Reminds me of Stephen Curtis Chapman’s song “glorious unfolding”
I have lived my life as a “always wanted to be” and “never was”. I never have measured up to who I wanted to be. I wanted SO much more for my girls then to have a chronically sick Mother, and one who can’t keep up with the house, meals, laundry, school/teacher demands, the “everyone else is” the “everyone else has”…..society is largely to blame. WE, mothers are also largely to blame, for putting these ideas upon others, and allowing them on ourselves.
I am BROKEN, IMPERFECT, I need to *believe* I am beautiful, and I try harder then anyone could imagine. But, that will most likely never be seen, I honestly feel like in this society, the only thing people see and bring attention to, are our failures, or what *they* consider to be wrong because it’s not what they would do. Women need to give each other a break! Give each other a HAND to HELP, not a judgement all glare. We need to see we are not in a competition, but rather all in it for the same goal!!!! To raise healthy, happy, wonderful children, and leave the world a little bit better then we found it, for their sake.
Thank you for your post. I may need to read this one every day, to help me realize it’s not just me who feels like I fail. And to encourage me that not having things PERFECT is certainly NOT failing.
❤️
My babys father, well he wasnt what i expected. T h en he died at xmas . she was 2 1\2. Life has thrown me for a ride ty for your humor, i too wanted to,be that mom! But my dreams were shattered big time, i dread xmas. I guess its just chin up!
Thank you for sharing your story Debbie. I hope that you have many moments of joy tucked within this season.
Rachel
This was one of 17 tabs open on my desktop to read “when I have time.” It was the perfect thing for me to finally read today after a busy weekend alone with 3 little ones and lists of things that went undone. Thank you for your beautiful words of encouragement! I needed the reminder that this life happening to me now, albeit messy, is actually what I always wanted.
Thank you for your beautiful post. It deeply comfort and encourage me.
Smile. You are welcome.
THANK YOU!!!!!!
I am a huge supporter of being “real” in this seemingly fake society we live in! The fact is, I am very real and I think that is very appealing to many people…but the truth is, I don’t have very many friends. I’m certain that people LOVE me being real, BUT when they start to feel like they have to reciprocate that “real-ness” they R U N!!!! Everyone likes to relate to someone who expresses the reality of life, but when it comes to admitting it themselves it’s a different story!
I love you being real! I am a mom of 4 and I too had some of the same dreams for what my live was going to look like and I SO relate to most of it likely never happening! I’m still in process of finding joy in that, but working that way!
Thanks again for your authenticity! You are a blessing to people like me!!!!
You write so beautifully, so honestly Rachel and that is truly a wonderful gift. Mothering is hard. It’s messy. It’s stressful. But it’s also the best thing I ever did.I really love your blog.x
Thank you. Thank you thank you thank you thank you. I absolutely needed that boost of comfort today. Thank you.
Thank you for keeping it so real. I love reading your stuff. They are always such a blessing to me at the right time. This seemed like it was written by you but was taken from my mind! I am so tired of wishing I had done things I didn’t and not having the money, time, or interest to do things now they society makes me think I need to do. Thank you!
Beautiful reminder!!!
Oh my! What a wonderful post. Totally heartwarming and real. Thank you.
I SO needed this! Thank you!!
i can only imagine the amount of people you uplift with your words. I came across one of your articles on one of my worst days, and it was just what I needed. I am a mother of 4 beautiful amazing children 7 and under. Every hardship that I seem to feel only makes the joys of my days that much more appreciative. God has blessed me with miracles that I am thankful for every day. Thank you for your articles it is what I needed! God bless!
they are very nice
Thank you for keeping it so real. I love reading your stuff. They are always such a blessing to me at the right time. This seemed like it was written by you but was taken from my mind! I am so tired of wishing I had done things I didn’t and not having the money, time, or interest to do things now they society makes me think I need to do. Thank you!
Sweet Hannah — thank you for writing me. I pray today you are happy and you have moments of joy.
Well many people were Very Extremely Blessed to find the Love of their life which many others Weren’t unfortunately.