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Surrendering to Motherhood

Truly, my world feels small. I wake and my life, from dawn until dusk, is ordered by a 19 pound toddler. We sit on the floor. We try new foods. We tear books off shelves. We sing, play the piano, take walks, swing, babble.

Then there are moments I step out. I get my act together, cross the street and meet women, mothers, new friends. One, a forensic biologist with the RCMP. Another, a casting director. Still another, the wife of an SFU professor, recently moved from San Fransisco. These are interesting, beautiful women who, along with me, have given up their ‘day jobs’ to nurse babies on hard wood chairs in the centre of Starbucks as the world speeds by.

It’s hard to give up. It’s hard to let the e-mails stack up for days, some for weeks, as I retire at 8pm, my body a sack of worn out bones. It’s hard to pass up opportunities, quit jobs. I don’t read blogs. I scan newspapers. I get by on CBC Radio newscasts as Madeleine and I spend the day. It’s enough for now. My life demands focus. 

I am surrendering. 

It’s my theme at present: Surrender. I recently read a book titled Surrendering to Motherhood, a gift from my friend Julia that spoke right to my core. “I realized I was working not for dollars but out of ego and a need to create,” author Iris Krasnow writes. It seems I had lurched back into the saddle for the same reasons and the stress of mothering a 6-month old, keeping a home, being a wife and working on a variety of projects was quickly killing any creative energy I had left.

A glimpse into my journal tells the story best:

Father, please help me unravel. I am wound so tight. Soiled laundry, dishes, clothes demanding mending. Unwritten stories, e-mails, notes to prepare. Waiting friends, family, husband, baby… clamouring at my skin.

You win.

I surrender all into your open arms. Wash, wash, wash over me like the liquid wind of ferry deck. Spill, spill like milk, the scent of honey, washing away my worry.

It is too much for me. I need to fall open, fall out of this rhythm, this frenetic pace.

I am mother, wife, daughter, friend. Then writer, teacher, blogger, business owner.

I fail Madeleine when I spill myself like an open grave. Smiling through fatigue, tears stored on shelves for moments like these.

They are a city wall. Built up, built up. Revealed first to my mother’s eyes, ears, love. 

“I am worried about you.”

(”Heed her words,” I hear you say.)

“Cut everything out. Say no. Until you have got her on a schedule and sleeping well in the night.”

At first I push back, then I breathe out. “Yes, Mom.” And the wave pulls back…

Yes. May that be my first response, Friend. Rather than no, no, no. I don’t know better. (Oh God, do I ever not.)

Candle, key and canvas feel dead to me. Oh spirit, come. Damn you assignments, damn you ego. For what is your gain?

Strip it away. Strip it away. Strip it away. 

My life leaves me little time for writing. I have an inquisitive, social child who demands all of me in her waking moments. When I have time I want to create: pen poetry, paint, write stories — the website for the Seeking Eve (inspirational Christian women) project is almost complete and I want to concentrate my energy there. I’ll also still be blogging weekly at After Hours

What does that mean for this little old blog? I hope to share pictures and poetry as life unfolds, sometimes writing, though I hope to spend more and more of my time on published work.

The few of you who read here: thank you! I love being able to share my life with you in this writer-ly way. I hope you keep reading and I promise to keep you up-to-date on new projects, and our ambling life.  

I’d like to leave you with another quote from Henri Nouwen, sent to me this week by my husband (he’s been doing that a lot lately!) 

“Our Unique Call

So many terrible things happen every day that we start wondering whether the few things we do ourselves make any sense. When people are starving only a few thousand miles away, when wars are raging close to our borders, when countless people in our own cities have no homes to live in, our own activities look futile. Such considerations, however, can paralyse us and depress us.

Here the word call becomes important. We are not called to save the world, solve all problems, and help all people. But we each have our own unique call, in our families, in our work, in our world. We have to keep asking God to help us see clearly what our call is and to give us the strength to live out that call with trust. Then we will discover that our faithfulness to a small task is the most healing response to the illnesses of our time.”

Here’s to seeing our call clearly and living with the trust necessary to see it through.

7 comments

1 Julia-the chemist { 03.17.10 at 11:21 am }

I am so glad that the book I found was a blessing to you…everything has purpose! You are the first person that i thought of when I saw it lying there on a worn table of a book fair in the AQ up here on the hill.
You are doing a good job, Christina. You are doing your best. Your thoughtfulness and striving makes you a good mom, and shows you have a heart of a mother. Most things that are of value don’t come easily, but that’s what makes them precious….soo keep on keeping on!~ with love…

2 Anneli { 03.18.10 at 11:08 am }

Great post! Thanks for sharing! I read your blog to keep up with your busy life and see how you are doing. :)

3 mamavee { 03.19.10 at 8:57 am }

I understand the struggle between wanting to do and do and do, and drag your child around as you do the things that you ache to do, at their expense. There is a balance, and it’s a constant battle to find the fine line between too much and not enough. I’m a firm believer in having my son live my life with me - I do not live my life for him - but at the same time, I need to make sacrifices and surrender, as you say, to the fact that at this time, I must do less or he suffers. So some days he gets dragged around doing all that I need and want to do, and then we spend the next few days recovering. My friend, you are experiencing the crucible that all mothers must go through and I understand.

4 jackie { 03.25.10 at 4:31 pm }

Christina, you’ve articulated so well what my first year of motherhood was like. I’m definitely going to buy and read “Surrender to Motherhood.” I think I reached that point of surrender a year and a half ago… it was a hard battle to fight. But I’m pregnant with our second BOY (due mid July) - the children have taken over!

5 Christina Crook { 03.26.10 at 7:10 am }

Thank you for your encouragement, friends. Jackie — that is amazing news! You should definitely pick up that book, or borrow my copy!

6 megan { 03.26.10 at 9:50 pm }

“We have to keep asking God to help us see clearly what our call is and to give us the strength to live out that call with trust.”

thank you for posting this. it’s a good reminder. and i’ve been needing those a lot lately. i don’t relate at all to the motherhood, but i’m so proud of you! can’t wait to see you and celebrate

7 Tracylynne { 03.30.10 at 11:58 am }

I used to read your blog all the time and suddenly it disappeared from my fav only to pop up this morning-just what I needed..nice to know that I am not the only one who is struggling with motherhood-my son is 9 months old and working full time and put a drain on me, the months have flown by and its been difficult to find the balance. I am hopeful that I will be able to find a way to be the mother I want to be. thanks for your inspirational words.

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