Monday, May 07, 2012

steeped in motherhood

When I had my daughter after 5 years of infertility, motherhood was sheer bliss.  It was incredible!  I was sleep deprived and it was challenging - but I WAS A MOM!  I had given birth to a precious teeny little angel.  I was the source of comfort, nutrition...love.  I carried her in a sling.  I used beautiful new cloth diapers.  I nursed on demand.  I co-slept.  Attachment parenting to the fullest! 


And then my beautiful, teeny angel became a toddler. 




She was very loud.  She did not love to sleep.  She pulled out all the toilet paper, spilled out all the dog food and wrote all over herself...daily.  At one point she even added a LARGE family portrait to her bedroom wall in marker.  One of her many graffiti art projects.  All the while, she was so precious and, though challenging, we wanted to add to our family more than ever.




 After secondary infertility, we were so blessed to become parents again through foster care. 


Augie came in with a bang.  He was sick.  He took out our whole family for the first month.  As a foster mom the bonding came slowly.  We were not permitted to co-sleep.  Slowly, those not so new cloth diapers were more of an inconvenience when dropping him off for family visits.  My hands were full.  I was content and for the first time ever in my married life, I was not actively seeking to conceive. 

After another year, I had another toddler on my hands.  This one particularly loved to eat dirt.  Also coal, stink bugs and dog food. 


And slowly my desire for motherhood again grew stronger.  I refused to get a family picture because it seemed a spot in our family was missing.  Rosie was praying for a sister.  My heart was open to another child.  And with that, Catie arrived.


Catie can scream like nobody's business.  Same as before, no co sleeping.  By now cloth diapers are lucky to be used as rags once in awhile.  Graffiti is a regular part of our home decor.  And sadly, cry it out is often all we can manage.  By bedtime, i am done. 

With her recent adoption, following Augie's 2011 adoption, my hands and my heart are overflowing.  Six years ago, I would not believe this could possibly be my future.  I am so blessed.  It is helpful for me to take a minute, sit back and see this.


"I know that God won't give me more than I can handle"

And God trusts me quite a bit.  Rosie is 4, Augie is 2, Catie is 1.  All that suffice to say the glow of new motherhood has worn off and I am now fully steeped in motherhood. 

When Augie reached that lovely age of toddler, I felt the strong need to address my PMS.  I added an anti-anxiety med and for awhile that seemed to take the edge off my mood swings.  Well, meds like that add a host of other troubles.  For example, NEVER try to just stop taking them.

After time, that little blue pill wasn't helping.   It was increasingly difficult to respond calmly to a stressful child situation.  One of my New Year's resolutions was to stop spanking.  I am against spanking for so many reasons.  IF (and I don't believe there is) a legitimately good reason for spanking, I was not using those reasons.  I was spanking because I was angry.

Recently I stopped by the Padre Pio Shrine to thank him for interceding and bringing Catie into our family.  I had two kids in the car and really only stopped because I was driving by.  I did not enter a building.  I simply pulled up to this statue, said thank you and touched the stigmata in his statue hand. 

Before my car even got back to the main road, I was sobbing.  Suddenly, the state of my soul was apparent and I had an immense need for confession NOW.  As I continued the drive to see family I was crying an ugly, purgative cry.  Fortunately, I know a few priests and I was blessed to find a confessor and attend adoration...while my family visited with the kids.  Confession is the big opportunity for reset, as my confessor encouraged. 

So now, I am struggling through this.  My greatest hope and prayer is to love my kids with a positive, affirming kind of love.  It has been a good week...but PMS is looming (side note, I am free of the little blue pill (yay!) and working with a NaPro MD on a more natural PMS treatment) I put this out there because I need to.  Accountability?  Prayers?  Yes.  The reality of my parenting is not as beautiful as a blog always seems to indicate.  And so I pray.

Padre Pio, please help!  Help me and all the mothers who struggle to be patient and kind in the midst of stress.  Help us to find the grace necessary to walk away.  Help us to build up our children and not tear them down. 

One of my favorite prayers and the one I am praying for this intention.

The Anima Christi
Soul of Christ, sanctify me
Body of Christ, save me
Blood of Christ, inebriate me
Water from Christ's side, wash me
Passion of Christ, strengthen me
O good Jesus, hear me
Within Thy wounds hide me
Suffer me not to be separated from Thee
From the malicious enemy defend me
In the hour of my death call me
And bid me come unto Thee
That I may praise Thee with Thy saints

and with Thy angels
Forever and ever
Amen




8 comments:

Jenny said...

Wow. This is a post I so needed to read. I'm fostering 4 year old twins who have been with us for almost 2 years. I struggle daily with patience, and need to reset. Thank you for the post. The Anima Christi is what I pray after Communion and one of my favorites. God bless.

Julie said...

I can relate on so many levels. We were blessed with 2 children through the gift of adoption 15 months apart...after bearing the cross of 9 years of a childless marriage.
My biggest struggle is NOT losing my temper with my kids...because for me, this is my dream come true...but I struggle in a HUGE way with being patient and kind to my husband. I am very demanding of him and get angry when he doesn't jump at my first call. I didn't need help from him before kids. We worked as a team and helped each other willingly, but I feel like I NEED his help daily to survive all the additional housework that 2 small children add!
I don't want to be a terrible wife. I need to pray that beautiful prayer in your post more often!

Becky D. said...

Hoping the napro doctor can help. Mine did help quite a bit before things required surgery. Also I know it's so hard with little ones but try to do all that self care things. Exercise sleep eating at least 1/2 decent. At least for me that helps so much. Also when we had our last foster placement I used respite at least once a month and found a regular sitter to come in for our adopted daughter a few afternoons a month. Now that we have a new baby and a 5 yr old that I'll be homeschooling soon I'm working on getting a good teen mother's helper for an afternoon a week at most. I'm also recovering from a hysterectomy right now. I'm in my mid 40's with a baby and I realize I can't be supermom and I find any help we can afford. Currently we're not fostering and I think we're done but we'll have to see after we finalize this adoption. Our old caseworker was almost begging us last month to get relicensed.
Oh and I get so impatient too. I'd be happy to be an accountablity partner or just an email buddy.

Blessed and Broken said...

It is so good to know that I am not alone in this struggle. I remember another blogger sharing a similar struggle and women relate. Suddenly so much more in life makes sense (did anyone else see Divine Secrets of the YaYa Sisterhood?). Motherhood is hard. I confessed that I pray daily for grace and I don't feel there is enough available. The response, "imagine if you weren't praying".

I have joked that I just want to survive and I want my children to survive. But God's wants more from me. He wants me to enjoy this and my children to thrive.

Thanks for the tips. Exercise was also recommended to me and I am trying to take that clear my head time. My prayers for you ladies too.

Mrs. Mike said...

This reflection is just so raw and beautiful...so much resonated with me. You're not alone. I struggle (daily it seems) with keeping my cool and keeping both the joys AND struggles of motherhood in perspective.

BTW, the Anima Christi is one of my favorite prayers, so much so that I taught the boys to say it along with me as a post-Communion meditation at every Mass. It's such a rich, spiritually-anchoring prayer that I hope they cling to the words as adults as much as I do.

Anonymous said...

I too can relate so well to those feelings. After secondary infertility we went from 1 child to 4 children in just 2 years. All 3 of our foster/adopt kiddos are the same age and 2 of them have some major emotional baggage. I get impatient and nagging with them and just want to be the nurturer they deserve. Praying for you and asking you pray for me as well. Thank you for such an honest post.

E said...

Beautiful and so real. Motherhood is so hard. You are so wise to seek consolation and forgiveness from the Father, no doubt He will pull you through with grace. :)

Mummy Bear said...

Thank you for your real-ness and honesty. It helps me!