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5 Lessons From My Mother

So many "firsts".

When you lose someone you love, you are told the year of "firsts" will be hard. There is so much truth in that. 

This is the first Mother's Day without my mom.  

The loss is more palpable today than it was the day she died.

In the spirit of my gracious and kind mother, however, it does not feel right to dwell on the loss.  Instead, I remember the gifts she gave me, and the wisdom and love she imparted to me. Perhaps that could be one of the lessons from my mother - to search for the beauty and love of God in all things?

 

5 Lessons From My Mother

The "Back Story"

God's ways are mysterious and beautiful; people often refer to them as "coincidence".

I don't believe in coincidence, but I do believe in a God who loves us and designs ALL of life's circumstances for our ultimate good.

Last winter I traveled to spend several days with my dad. I helped him clean out a few more of my mom's things - and in those was a book tucked behind many other books. This book turned out to be a precious God wink. I even will go far as to say my mom led me to that book.

I spent a lot of time in between helping my dad and going through her things just soaking up Gift From The Sea, by Anne Morrow Lindbergh.

As I read I began to draw a multitude of parallels between the gifts from the sea and the gifts my mother had given me. I spent much of that week sitting by the pool with tears streaming down my face.

There can be so much beauty in the hard.

I could give you many more than 5 lessons, but these are what stick out most prominently to me now.

 

Have Patience in All Things

Patience, patience, patience, is what the sea teaches. Patience and faith. One should lie empty, open, choiceless as a beach - waiting for a gift from the sea.
— Anne Morrow Lindbergh

My mom had the patience of a saint. When I was a child she spoke to me about patience so often, and I remember her reinforcing that to me as an adult.

That patience was especially important when I became a mother - especially the mother of a toddler who tested my limits! My mother always had a very calm way of reassuring me that patience would win out.

When a hysterical, screaming little girl wasn't getting her way I remember my mom saying to me, "Stick to your guns. Put her in her room and don't let her come out until she has calmed down. She might cry so hard she will make herself sick, but she has to learn to have patience."

Not only did my three-year-old begin to learn patience, her mama got to practice patience as well.

 

A Woman CANNOT Do Everything

My mother raised her girls to be independent, capable, and strong. She saw each of us through college, motherhood, and careers, yet she also made it quite clear to me that I could not have it ALL.

I was under no illusion that I could be the kind of mother my children deserved AND serve my own need for a career as well.

When I decided to go back to work after the birth of my first child she told me bluntly how she disagreed, and then she supported my decision (because this is what she always did - no matter my choices she would tell me her opinion and then support me).

This is not the life of simplicity but the life of multiplicity that the wise men warn us of. It leads not to unification but to fragmentation. It does not bring grace; it destroys the soul... I must find a balance somewhere, or an alternating rhythm between these two extremes; a swinging of the pendulum between solitude and communion, between retreat and rhythm.
— Anne Morrow Lindbergh

My mother created a home for us that was peaceful and calm, with plenty of time to be quiet and appreciate things of beauty.

We ate dinners together often. We fed our creative selves. I don't ever recall life being frenzied or scattered.

As far as the working and raising children issue, I see now that giving up my job was the best decision I ever made. Eventually, as my children grew and life changed, I was able to pursue my "career" and do more than I ever imagined possible.

This goes back to PATIENCE.

 

Being a Homemaker is a Noble and Worthy Calling

My mother made child rearing an art. It was her calling and her joy.  She was first and foremost a wife and mother.

5 Lessons From My Mother

 

I always knew FAMILY was her life's mission.

I'm not so sure many young women get that gift in this day and age.

We do not see the results of our giving as concretely as man does in his work. In the job of home-keeping there is no raise from the boss, and seldom praise from others to show us we have hit the mark. Except for the child, woman’s creation is so often invisible, especially today.
— Anne Morrow Lindbergh

My mother always complimented me on the work I was doing with my family. She sent me cards on Mother's Day. 

I knew that mothering and homemaking MATTERED. 

I pray that my own daughter knows that if God calls her to that life, it is THE noblest profession of all.

 

With Age Comes Wisdom

My mother never fretted about aging. She accepted each pound, wrinkle, and setback with grace.

She invested in older women in our church and stressed to me the importance of them in our lives. 

My mom taught me that there is something beautiful that comes with each stage of life, and not to be fooled by a society that seems to only value youthfulness and beauty.

We Americans, with our terrific emphasis on youth, action, and material success, certainly tend to belittle the afternoon of life and even to pretend it never comes... In our breathless attempts we often miss the flowering that waits for afternoon.
— Anne Morrow Lindbergh

Each stage of our lives holds something extraordinary, but if we are too busy wishing for the previous season we will likely miss the beauty in front of us.

My mom embraced the beauty in every stage of her life. I pray I am doing the same.

 

You Are Stronger Than You Know

After my second child was born I had a horrible struggle with postpartum depression. This depression was so foreign to me, but in the years to come it would rear its head several more times.

The first couple of times my mom came to the rescue... staying with our family, helping care for my children, literally forcing me out of bed in the morning. 

She would always leave, however, before I wanted her to. She gave me the tools to get better and promised me I could succeed on my own - and always with God's help. Through these times I learned I had a strength I didn't know I possessed.

I learned I could handle tough things - very tough things.

When my mom's death came I didn't crumble. I would like to think I made it through those dark days with grace and faith - and often times a smile. 


The Gift From The Sea is one of treasured possessions now. (In fact, it sparked a bit of an obsession about Anne Morrow Lindbergh - a fascinating figure if you get a chance to learn more about her.)

Knowing that my mom read the same words and lived by so many of them gives me such comfort.

I do not take lightly the gift of a wonderful mother. I know not everyone has had this experience, and I count myself blessed to have been loved by my mother.

 

Additional Reading:

Gift from the Sea: 50th-Anniversary EditionWisdom from Gift from the Sea (Mini Book)Gift From The Sea, An Answer to the Conflicts in Our LivesThe Aviator's Wife: A NovelAnne Morrow Lindbergh: Her LifeAnne Morrow Lindbergh: First Lady of the AirAgainst Wind and Tide: Letters and Journals, 1947-1986North to the Orient (Harvest Book)Hour Of Gold, Hour Of Lead: Diaries and Letters Of Anne Morrow Lindbergh, 1929-1932No More Words: A Journal of My Mother, Anne Morrow LindberghLocked Rooms Open Doors:: Diaries And Letters Of Anne Morrow Lindbergh, 1933-1935 (A Harvest Book)Anne Morrow Lindbergh: Between the Sea And the Stars (Lerner Biographies)War Within and Without: Diaries and Letters of Anne Morrow Lindbergh, 1939-1944

 

5 Lessons from My Mother

Let Them Be Little: The Crime of Vanishing Childhood

Why can't we just let children be CHILDREN? 

Why can't we just let them be little?

There are many ways in which our public schools fail to educate children. We are failing to cultivate wonder in children.

My heart sank this week as I read about a kindergarten gun control walkout in Connecticut. 

What has the world come to when we use five and six-year-old children as political pawns?

Have we become so SELFISH that we are willing to sacrifice our precious children on the altar of "making a point"? 

It appears so.

 

Let Them Be Little: The Crime of Vanishing Childhood

The irony in this is that the more we remove "childhood" from our children's lives, the less capable adults they will become. When we force our children to bypass childhood we fail to realize the detrimental effects this will have on them in later life.

Parents are fooling themselves if they believe schools are going to preserve and nurture childhood. 

I was once among a large number of trusting parents who believed the public schools had my children's best interest at heart - or maybe I should simply say the interests of the public schools are misguided. As I watched my kindergarten student participate in "Just Say No" week (the anti-drug campaign) - when she had no idea of what drugs even were, I wondered why political agendas were part of her school day.

I was so conditioned to just ACCEPT  these things as part of the public school's duty to children. I didn't question what the public schools did. They were the AUTHORITY on education. We just sent our children to school - the teachers had their job and I had mine.

Then one day I started getting an uneasy feeling about all of this. A friend loaned me some homeschooling books. The principal at my child's school didn't appreciate me asking so many questions about the WHYS of what they did. The idea of homeschooling began to take a foothold in my mind.

Finally, we abandoned the ideal of public school and decided to just let our children be LITTLE.

 


Three Ways Homeschooling Lets Our Children Be LITTLE

 

Homeschooling gives children time to discover the world.

Children learn best through DISCOVERY. 

Plopping them in a sterile environment with worksheets and prescribed activities leaves no time for a child to explore and wonder. 

If we are trying to teach our children about birds - and most of all, how to APPRECIATE THE BEAUTY of birds - setting up a bird feeder and observing beautiful birds is of much more value than reading about birds in a textbook. As small children are going about their daily work of PLAYING, they may stop at intervals to admire the birds at the feeder. They will ask their mother, "What bird is this?", which can lead to discovery, which makes a memory, which then cements that knowledge.

Of the evils of modern education few are worse than this - that the perpetual cackle of his elders leaves the poor child not a moment of time, nor an inch of space, wherin to wonder - and grow.
— Charlotte Mason, Volume 1, p. 18

A no-twaddle bird study put together by the parent is of infinite value and allows our children to learn in an unrestricted environment. It challenges them to learn more, builds an appreciation of all things beautiful, and serves as a building block in a lifetime of knowledge of the natural world around them. 

Giving our children permission to indulge in these things is a gift. 

 

Homeschooling gives children time with their parents and siblings.

How very old-fashioned and un-evolved of me to suggest children should be home with their mother (or father) all day! 

It certainly isn't in vogue to suggest the family be the primary unit of socialization and support, is it?

I have seen first-hand how happy and healthy children are when they have the security and being with family all day. Time with family builds security, self-confidence, and happiness.  

This time at home with parents and siblings allows our children the space they need to PLAY, EXPLORE, and LEARN.

How much more valuable is a walk in the neighborhood with the family than sitting through a "Just Say No to Drugs" presentation? 

We love to use the buzz words "quality time", but I would argue that TIME with our children is important - not just set aside time we deem as "quality", but giving all of our time to our children in their youngest years.

I cannot measure the learning that took place on our walks (especially in the fall) when my children were young. I look back on this now and am so thankful we just LET THEM BE LITTLE!

Jump in leaf piles. Get muddy. Collect bugs. Play make-believe baseball games by yourself in the backyard. Snuggle with mom.

Let Them Be Little

Homeschooling Preserve A Child's Innocence

But they will have to function in the "real" world one day, so why are you sheltering them now?

Isn't this the most tired argument you have heard? I grow weary of hearing people say this.

I am, however, long past caring what others think about the way we educate our children. 

Am I going to protect and shelter my children? YOU BET! 

Elementary age children have no business:

  • worrying during active shooter drills
  • taking part in sex education
  • participating in political agendas
  • and a myriad of other things!

Childhood is virtually passed over when a child takes on so many things they aren't emotionally or physically capable of handling.

I vividly recall a day when my child was in third grade (our last year in the public schools) - there was an escaped convict on the loose in our area. They were searching cars on the main road near our home. The elementary school was locked down. I remember being so concerned about my daughter that day - I knew she would worry. 

Wouldn't it have been so much easier to have had her at home - safely in my care with our doors locked and her being none the wiser - than subjecting her to worry?

I will fight tooth and nail to preserve my children's childhood and to LET THEM BE LITTLE.

 

The day we fret about the future is the day we leave our childhood behind.
— Patrick Rothfuss

If you are interested in more homeschool encouragement, please visit the page I have dedicated to that subject.

It is important to let our children be LITTLE. We owe it to them, and ultimately our society will benefit if we give our children everything they need and deserve in their younger years. 

My greatest desire is to equip and encourage you in the homeschool journey. Please leave me a comment if I can help you in any way!