Grief.

Photo by Karim MANJRA on Unsplash

One of the good things that has come out of this pandemic quarantine life is that other people are experiencing the life I live as a mama. With this comes increased compassion, understanding, and new eyes on the “lock down” experience. 

Motherhood is extremely isolating at times. In the past I would refer to my life as “depressing” because I didn’t have another word for it. I knew it wasn’t the right word because I obviously love my children, have fun with them, and enjoy many parts of my life!

Now, thanks to other people living this experience of being stuck at home, thrust into a totally different life than they were familiar with, we have people writing about it.

They’re using words like “grief” and “grieving.”

At first I was like 🤷🏼‍♀️ “I don’t get it.” 

But now I see it. When I feel down or depressed about my life, what it really is is grief over the freedoms I “lost” when I had kids. It’s the grief over having to say no to me when I don’t want to. It’s the pain of self-denial. It’s hard. I don’t like it. It’s deeply uncomfortable. 

With this new word, I feel like I’m allowed to feel sad about what Is gone and yet appreciate what I have. The old phrase “my life is depressing” had brought an unfair judgment on my new life. 

Without being disrespectful for all the people that have come into hardship because of this pandemic, I have to say: I’m grateful for it. 

Miracle Morning: getting off the strugglebus

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Hey look it’s one of my semi-annual posts! I’m feeling pretty great about it, thanks for asking. A few weeks ago my husband referred to “my old blog” and I was a little sad when I realized he meant this one. It’s not old, just a little neglected, ok??? If you’ve been following this blog for any length of time, you may notice a pattern. I stop things and sometimes I start them back up again. This is actually improvement because I used to just stop things and be disappointed in myself and then never start again. This has happened in the last few months again. I stopped doing my early morning routine and things fell into chaos.

Miracle Morning

One of the most transformational changes our family has made in the last year was getting up before our kids. My early mornings was largely inspired by the concept of a Miracle Morning. I had already been waking up and doing morning pages, so this is only a slight variation on that. Earlier this year, that meant I was actually waking up at 5:30 ON PURPOSE. My toddler had started waking up earlier, at 6, and so I had become so desperate for my ‘me’ time that it became worth it for me to wake up that early. I’m telling you, it changed my attitude as a parent. I went from feeling irritated with my kids for taking up “my” time during the day, to having my day start with quiet, reading, journaling, exercise, and when they woke up I no longer felt like I was being cheated out of being a person.

It was a huge win for me to make that change. I spent years having a bad attitude before I got desperate enough to change things. Our family life runs much more smoothly now particularly in the morning. I have never been a “morning person” but the time has become precious enough to me that I was looking forward to it! It certainly makes for earlier evenings — I’ll get into bed at 9:30. Some nights that means that I’m only awake 30 minutes longer than my oldest, but it’s ok because I’ll have that time in the morning again.

We made some changes the last few weeks and I fell off the early-morning wagon for a bit. But I’m back, slowly, and that’s what counts! Not quitting entirely, but getting back at it again. Like this blog. I’m still at it, and I’m still at slowly chipping away at my goals. I’ll write more about that later.



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