Someone close to me once told me they were impressed with how great a mother I had become, especially, this person said, because it wasn’t something that came naturally to me, but was obviously something I had to work very hard at. My initial reaction was to be slightly smoffed (my term for: sort of maybe offended). I didn’t take it for a compliment, but rather struggled with more closely observing how and who I was as a mother. And then I thought of other talents, skills and roles – of which there are numerous. I thought how even though I don’t feel like a talented cook, though I don’t necessarily enjoy cooking, it is still something that I have to do (multiple times a day)… and so, through the years I’ve come to tolerate and perhaps even find some joy in the kitchen. There are even some dishes I make that taste delicious. Go me, right! But it doesn’t come naturally, and that thought doesn’t smoff me at all.
I think that because Motherhood is such an intensely unique personal and spiritual journey, it is easy to take any remarks about our role and fulfilling of it quite personally.
My life as a mother is full of stories that make me laugh at myself and my own lack of understanding. I find myself guffawing when I think of how I reacted to toddler tantrums with my first, and now how I just simply don’t react with my fourth. The insistence I placed that my daughter NOT wear the same red dress every single day, and the true battle of wills that ensued kills me as I sneak the outfit my four year old wears daily off at night in order to wash it. Taking moments to explore nature instead of pleading to hurry, has come as I have aged, as my responsibilities have changed, and my role magnified.
I was never one of those little girls who wanted nothing more than to be a mother. I never dreamed I would be a stay-at-home mom. Perhaps it was my motherhood misconceptions that led to motherhood coming as a difficult challenge, and anything but naturally. But I’ve gotten better and I’ve worked hard at it – for it does take work, and it is hard. And while motherhood may never come naturally to me, I have naturally come into motherhood; and I love it.