Or at least she thought so.
She’d been in control her whole life, but when those boys came along they turned everything upside down, and try as she might, she couldn’t get it right side up again.
So she hid.
She stopped doing the things that brought her joy because she couldn’t do them with her boys. She stopped sharing her heart because she was afraid of what people would find there. She closed the curtains on her home to keep judgement out and the truth in.
She went to bed most nights in tears because she knew she hadn’t been the kind of mom she wanted to be that day.
Powerless. Frightened. Alone. Depressed. That’s how she felt. Constantly. Like she was failing at the most important thing she’d ever put her hands to, and couldn’t do anything to stop it.
Then one day she heard something that changed her life. A friend pulled back the curtain on her own life, allowed our friend to see in, and it didn’t look all that different from hers.
A whiny, disobedient child? Check.
A stretched, weary mom? Check.
Tension? Interruption? Disrespect?
Check. Check. Check.
All the same. All much more like her world than she thought anybody else’s could possibly be. And for the first time ever, she felt like someone knew. Someone saw her. And that maybe her life wasn’t quite as abnormal as she thought.
Hope.
It came rushing in. An idea that if someone else was experiencing the same thing, maybe she could survive. Maybe she could thrive.
That girl was me.
In the summer of 2009, when my boys were just four and two, hope came rushing to my rescue. Six months later, moved and stirred by the desire to help other moms open the curtains of their hearts and homes, Erin and I co-founded the MOB Society, and the doing of it has changed our lives.
I didn’t think I would make it. Didn’t think I would ever get in front of the daily grind of motherhood. But with God’s intervention, the openness of a friend, and this MOB Society community, I’m growing stronger every day.
I have decided to fight for my boys. To fight for my freedom from shame and doubt. To fight, claw, and beg my way into Jesus’ presence every day, and by God’s grace, teach you to fight, too.
It’s because of this space, this community, that I’ve learned the power of prayer. It’s in this community that I’m learning to choose hope every second of every day. It’s in relating to this community that I delight in the chaos of raising boys, and it’s in learning from this community that I’m encouraged to raise godly men.
I don’t want to do without this community.
You’re my people, and God uses you to give me strength.
Today, we would love to hear your stories. Would you honor us by sharing how the MOB Society has met you in a time of need? How God has used a particular word to give you hope just when you needed it?
If you’ve been strengthened by our stories, strengthen us with yours in the comments?
(And if you feel so led, give to our fundraiser so we can continue encouraging, equipping, and strengthening parents of boys for many years to come. Our fundraiser is almost over, and we need your help now).
I had been wondering why I cannot respond to my children the way I do others? Then I read this … “yet, we wouldn’t scream at that innocent infant to get him to submit to our needs. No, we gently pace the floor, we console, we rock, we pat them on the back, and we take as much time as is necessary to get through it. In 1 Thessalonians 2:7 it says, “But we were gentle among you, just as a nursing mother cherishes her own children.”
It hit me, they are ‘others’ children. They belong to God and he expects me to respond just as a nursing mother would. Thank you for this wisdom!
Wow, this is me! This was me this past weekend. I am so tired. I am tired of being tired. What am I doing wrong? My 5 and 7 year old boys deserve better. But they are completely wearing me out. I had the thought, ‘That girl. That girl that I want to be. She is always haunting me.’ Then I thought, maybe that girl doesn’t really exist because if she did, that would mean she was perfect. Why do I always feel guilty for not being that girl?