Categories
Fulfillment

Angelina Jolie on motherhood

In case you haven’t seen celebrity gossip over the last few years, I’ll just tell you: Angelina Jolie has a bunch of kids, and she’s supposed to have a couple more pretty soon here.

A little over a year ago, Jolie was interviewed by Reader’s Digest, and I found this quotation on receiving support from her partner, Brad Pitt (you’ve heard of him?):

He encourages the right things. If I’ve had a full day and just really been a hands-on mom, he’ll make a point to let me know that’s something he’s proud of. If I’m writing an Op-Ed, he’s the first person to want to read the drafts. I could be dressed up in the sexiest outfit for a photo shoot, and by his behavior, he’ll let me know that’s nice, but it’s nothing as sexy as when I’m home surrounded by the kids or reading books, educating myself. He slows me down to kind of get it right, to relax into the strength of my family and the love.

I like the support that she describes here, but most of all, I think it’s really important for us to “slow . . . down to . . . get it right, to relax into” our families and our love. What helps you to slow down?

Do you have a quote from a famous mom? Submit it to famousmoms (at) mamablogga.com and we’ll discuss it one week, and you’ll get a link (if you include your URL, of course).

Categories
Kids/Parenting Fulfillment

You don’t get it back

I think this quote pretty much speaks for itself. From A Touch of Wonder by Arthur Gordon, p. 77รขโ‚ฌโ€œ78:

When I was around thirteen and my brother ten, Father had promised to take us to the circus. But at lunchtime there was a phone call; some urgent business required his attention downtown. We braced ourselves for disappointment. Then we heard him say [into the phone], “No, I won’t be down. It’ll have to wait.”

When he came back to the table, Mother smiled. “The circus keeps coming back, you know.”

“I know,” said Father. “But childhood doesn’t.”

What do you do to try to enjoy childhood today?

Categories
Fulfillment

The Taming of the Mom

I have seen The Taming of the Shrew, I think, once (Elizabeth Taylor/Richard Burton version; I’ve seen 10 Things I Hate About You at least a few times, but somehow I don’t think that counts). There’s a production of Shrew at this year’s Utah Shakespearean Festival, and the feature in the Living section of the paper on Sunday was on the play.

If you’ve forgotten, the eponymous shrew is Katharina (Kate in this updated version), who is rather mean and abusive toward men, especially suitors. In the end, though, she is “tamed” and accepts one Petruchio as her husband (who gave as good as he got).

Katharina’s final soliloquy seems to show a drastic change in character (selection below for Shakespeare lovers) that explains why she would agree to marry (finally). The speech goes on about how hard husbands work for their wives and all husbands want is a little obedience and a kind look, and that’s not really asking that much, etc.

These lines are often ridiculed as an outdated view of marriage, clearly a product of their time that has no place in ours. And, of course, to an extent I agree that this oversimplified view of women’s subservience and subjugation isn’t a proper definition of marriage.

But what I found interesting was the actress’s (Melinda Parrett) take on the lines (emphasis added, source):

[I]n the contest of this production, Parrett finds Kate’s words moving and affirming.

“It’s not about losing yourself,” she said. “It’s about finding out who you are in relation to someone else. What I hear is that life is too short—love requires give and take, and we should simply relax and offer support to each other. I get choked up over it. It’s what I hope to feel someday.”

Although marriage and motherhood are usually related ๐Ÿ˜‰ , when I read that quotation I wasn’t thinking about my husband. I was thinking about becoming a mother. For my husband and me, despite a short courtship, the transition to marriage was . . . well, what transition? Do you mean moving in together?

But for me, the transition to motherhood was very hard, and, of necessity, very sudden. I struggled for months (and sometimes still struggle) to define myself as a person and not only as a mother. I often feared that anything that was once unique about me, anything that I enjoyed or valued as an individual, would be obliterated by the full-time obligation entailed in having a child.

“It’s not about losing yourself. It’s about finding out who you are in relation to someone else.” Certainly this applies to marriage, but in an even deeper way, it’s applied to me as a mother. In some ways, I do (or did) feel that I had to lose myself—but only to find a new self, someone who was not “just” a mother, not “only” a mother, not “solely” a mother.

Someone who was a mother and proud to be a mother—but was still me.

Did you find it difficult to “find out who you are in relation to someone else” when you married or became a mother?

Categories
Fulfillment Faith

Life is rough, and then you die

At the recommendation of a bookstore manager, I picked up a book the other day. I recognized the author’s last name as the maiden name of one of my church youth group leaders. Turns out, not only was the author the mother of my youth group leader, but my former leader had been instrumental in editing that book for publication. I really enjoyed the book and marked several passages to delve into further on MamaBlogga.

How many times have I told my tantruming toddler, “Life is rough—and then you die”? At least a few. But is this something I really want him to internalize?

Marilynne Todd Linford takes aim at this popular teaching in her book We Are Sisters:

To say that life is difficult or suffering or filled with unyielding despair is as erroneous as saying life is easy, carefree, or filled with continual bliss. (132)

Yes, life is rough, but it trivializes all life to say that all of life is suffering. I make no secret that I think that motherhood is difficult. (Frankly, anyone who thinks otherwise is probably crazy or should be having (more) kids, because they’re obviously doing better than I am with my one.) But, like life, motherhood isn’t endless drudgery (at least once a baby can start responding to you, in my opinion) and pain.

Life is not just rough. Unlike C-3PO, we are not made to suffer. While some suffering is our lot in life, it’s not the be-all and end-all of our existence. After all, as the Apostle John quoted Jesus Christ, “I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly” (John 10:10).

Linford continues:

Does it matter, then, if you think life is difficult? Yes, because it is a half-truth, and by acting on a false foundation we build on shifting sands. When you realize that life is not difficult but made up of opposing forces, the precious gift of agency becomes even more crucial. (133)

Yes, life is sometimes rough, but I need to remember that we can choose to look at the positive or dwell on the negative—and dwelling on the negative aspects of life won’t bring happiness. I need to remember to highlight the good things in my son’s life—and mine.

Categories
Fulfillment Faith

Fulfillment and faith

Motherhood is near to divinity. It is the highest, holiest service to be assumed by mankind.

—J. Reuben Clark

To me, it’s very difficult to talk about, think about or learn about personal fulfillment in motherhood or any other aspect of life without touching on my faith. Most of the time, I try not to mention this aspect of fulfillment because I want all mothers to be able to find personal fulfillment regardless of their beliefs.

But I would be remiss if I neglected to mention faith as it plays a very large role in my life and my world view. I promise I won’t always do this, but I will probably mention my faith from time to time in contemplation of fulfillment.

As a Christian, I have always been taught to hope for a better world. And while I do believe that there is an eternal reward awaiting the righteous, I also know that we are here on Earth that we might have joy. Our joy in our eternal reward would never be complete without the things that we must (and can only) accomplish in this life—such as having children.

When I was a teenager, I knew that families were essential for our eternal reward, but at the time I often thought that we were put in families to become better people by ‘overcoming’ our upbringing—and our family members. (I was a snotty teenager sometimes.) I have since learned that we’re placed in families to become better people through them and with them—and our eternal reward would not be heavenly without them.

I have also been taught that motherhood is an exalting and ennobling life. It’s the highest embodiment of womanhood. I believe that, and I can quote lots of wise men and women saying beautiful, inspiring things about that, but when it’s getting toward the third hour in a row of my son’s whining and screaming and I can’t find anything to please him, when the last week’s worth of laundry and mail is strewn across my couches and Hayden’s toys littered throughout the house, when I haven’t gotten dressed in two days or showered in I don’t know how long, it’s hard to feel exalted and noble.

Fortunately, the same people who know that motherhood is exalting and ennobling also know that it’s far from easy. Somehow, I didn’t get this memo before arriving home from the hospital. I’m not sure how or when I missed that, but I was floored to discover how difficult and daunting motherhood was nearly every day.

When my son was about a week and a half old, I asked my mother in desperation: “Why is it so hard?”

“So we will love them more,” she told me.

You love those whom you serve, and I will probably never serve anyone the way I serve my family. By building that love through a lifetime of service, I hope that I’ll want to be with my husband and children forever—and I pray they’ll want to be with me.

But I think there’s another reason why motherhood is so hard. In a day when motherhood is being assaulted and devalued on all sides, perhaps the difficulty of mothering is the only way we can be reminded that it’s worth it. Sometimes that difficulty can make is hard to remember, but I seldom find the things that are truly worthwhile to be easy (and vice versa).

And as a Christian, I am reminded that while motherhood is the hardest thing I’ve ever done, His burden is easy and His yoke is light. Perhaps the last reason why motherhood is so hard for me sometimes is because I seem to forget so easily that I don’t have to do it all by myself, for myself and through myself.

Sometimes the only way I can feel fulfillment is to know that God loves me—and Hayden—and that it is truly His will that I be Hayden’s mother today. Submitting my will to His will be my life’s work—and, knowing me, I doubt that it will ever be easy.