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Occasionally darkness seems to cloud my emotions and thoughts. The light eeks out of my soul suddenly, and I glance inside at the state of my heart. Sometimes, I find myself in a place where I want to run away—away from the challenges in relationships with my loved ones, away from the constant needs and demands of life (cooking, cleaning, work of every kind and then all over again.)
This is evidently a normal occurrence in some seasons of life for most women. I would love to flee the dramatic (All children, it seems, must go through stages—It starts out with toddlerhood, moves through developmental stages, escalates in late elementary years, Explodes with teens, Grows more serious with young adults. Then there is the period of self-realization or self-actualization that takes place with all maturing young adults.) And parents must learn how to navigate these mysterious places with grace and stay on top of their own lives.
It’s ok to feel like sometimes life is just plain hard.
But in those moments, we must learn to give ourselves grace for ourselves or we will explode from unrealistic expectations. We are putting so much pressure on ourselves as mothers. Each time we find ourselves too busy to cook (so we opt for fast food), too exhausted to clean, (so we “leave it until tomorrow”) or so hectic in our lives that we didn't do a devotional with our children one whole week, we feel absolutely defeated and believe that we somehow failed in life.
While it is incredibly wonderful to set our standards high and live within these great ideals, as I have said many times before,
We must hold ourselves to a standard of grace, not perfection.
Each of us is a miracle, a work of art, an expression of the artist God—and each of us is flawed. It is why Jesus came, to alleviate our shame and guilt.
Yet, when I take time to ponder, to really look at the beauty of my precious ones, my family, my friends, beyond the irritating moments, I will be in awe of what sweetness God has shared with me. It is simple to see all the flaws in my children, my husband, and myself. And it would be easy for me to take the blame for their failures, since I am the captain of our daily lives, and responsible for training them! But that is not healthy or biblical.
So, I have come to practice several commitments to help me see each person for who they are inside. And to bring a fresh wind of grace to each moment.
1. Assume the best about people in your life and choose to love them according to their needs. Recognize that they are growing, struggling, living with their imperfect selves.
My little one is not plotting to make my life miserable by being needy. My children expresse his needs through crying and whining to let me know something doesn’t feel right in their world.
It is a grace for me to be patient and seek to bring comfort and, again, grace! Same with my teen, my adult child. Their motivation in life is not to frustrate me. They are frustrated with the imperfections of life, (of which I am one), but God encourages me to be long-suffering, patient, humble if I am to identify with and understand Jesus. I am their coach who gets to encourage them through the frustration. My husband is not necessarily mad at me but he is frustrated with the bills, the long hours of work, the things that keep falling apart, my friends also have a context that may cause them, for the moment, to be frustrated or angry.
2. I am asking God to help me see people from his perspective.
I told my extroverted children that they should not feel bad about being loud and bigger than life--God made them (and me!) that way and he actually liked them as they were as He made them that way. His design was good and our personalities have a unique purpose. Look at always talking Peter, who Jesus called his "rock." What about David who danced before God with all his might and pleased God through it. Or the "too quiet" child who is timid. Perhaps this gentleness will serve to open the hearts of those needing a gentle, quiet spirit. Look for the good attributes of everyone you meet and affirm them for those great qualities.
3. Treat others the way I want to be treated.
I have lots of moody times. When I am too busy, I become a drill sergeant. When I am depressed, I have darkness and cry. When I am in a hurry, I am impatient. Yet, I sort of want every one in the world to make me an exception, to just understand why I am grumpy and to give me a pass. I want perfect understanding for my hormones and I long for gentle love and affection, which, in my case, wins the day. Even if I do not always have what feels like meets my needs, I can understand that my others long for something that their particular selves need. Maybe that is what “my others” want when they keep exposing their imperfect moods, too.
I am not talking about not training and not helping your children to learn not to be whiners or complainers. We need to slowly train that out of them. But I am talking about how to understand, how to approach them as I am witnessing these things. I ask, "Is my little one too exhausted to be able to handle life in a mature way?” Then I will be patient, cuddle them and put them to bed. Is my teen feeling rejected by his peers? Then he doesn't need more criticism, he needs a friend. Is my husband discouraged by something at work? Maybe he needs a cold drink, a time on the front porch to ease his bad day.
However, rather than focusing on the bad, it’s more beneficial to focus on faith and the potential someday to be realized after years of praying and seeing God work through the moments I choose to be patient, kind and sympathetic; faith that God can take my honest offering of steadfastness, love and hope and make it into a beautiful legacy.
He will make up for my deficits and I will fill in the cracks for the deficits of those in my life. But in order to be the love, words and caress of Jesus to those in my life, I must relinquish my own needs, for the moment. This relinquishing happens one minute at a time--one detail of my life at a time.But this sort of love will change the course of my family's lives forever.
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