Are You a “Good Mom?”

If you’re like most moms sometimes you say to yourself, “I’m such a bad mom.” 

But just this casual comment to yourself can have self-fulfilling effects. 

Most of us are doing way better than we think, but we don’t notice it because our brains only notice the negative. 

You might be surprised that being a “good” mom is less about changing what we’re doing and more about how we look at it. Learn how to see your mothering differently…

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What to Do When You Know Exactly What Someone Else Should Do (And They Aren’t Doing It)!

Each of us have unwritten rules for how people in our lives should act. When they don’t follow them, it’s disappointing. One of the most powerful ways to improve a relationship is to take back responsibility for our own feelings regardless of how someone else acts. And, love them and us no matter what.

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The Power of Choosing : Mom on Purpose

Although many of us chose to be mothers and wives on purpose, being a deliberate mother or wife requires constant recommitment to our roles.  The simple act of articulating our commitment can change the way we feel and may even change our relationships.

Trapped in India

Last week I took a trip to India with some friends.  It was an amazing trip, but I really missed my kids and my husband!  On the last day, I started getting so excited to see them, hug them, and get to be part of their daily life again.  When I got to the airport counter, I realized my passport and visa were missing.  I looked everywhere.  Gone. The airline staff would not allow me to board the plane without them.

I was trapped by myself in India until I could get a new passport and visa to get home.

During the time I was stuck, I had a lot of time to think.  I had been away from family before, but it was the first time I had ever been prevented by someone else from being with my family. I felt so helpless.

Wishing I Could Be With Family

While stuck in India, I dearly missed my 3-year-old resting her head on my shoulder.  I missed my 6-year-old’s excitement when she gets home from school and tells me all about her day.  I missed my 9-year-old’s thoughtful questions and insights about the world and I missed the way she makes us laugh.  I missed hearing beautiful music from my 11-old on the piano and violin and watching her creativity as she plays with neighborhood friends.
I did not, however, particularly miss the more challenging parts of my days as a mom.  Like the moments when I am so frustrated with my children’s whining that all I want to do is go in my room and shut the door.  Or the times I become overwhelmed when everyone needs help at the same time and I lose my temper (as if they are wronging me in some way by all needing something simultaneously).  Or, when I wish I could be doing something more interesting than playing blocks and filling water bottles and driving carpools.  (I admit that sometimes I get distracted and check my text messages or put on a podcast when I’m with my kids instead of being fully present.)

I Chose This

As I reflected about what I missed about my kids, I found myself thinking: “I wanted to be a mom. I chose to have my children on purpose. I chose to be at home with them on purpose.  I chose this life!  I love this life!”  But I also realized that in my more difficult moments I sometimes forget that I chose this life.  It’s not so much that I choose NOT to be a mom in challenging moments I just start to feel out of control—my brain starts to believe everything is happening TO me.  There are many competing demands coming at me and I’m just trying to re-act.  It feels overwhelming, uncomfortable and unpleasant sometimes.  Sometimes, I feel like I’m stuck doing something I don’t want to be doing.  Sometimes I feel like my children are making my life hard.  Sometimes (subconsciously) I begin to feel like I’m a victim who deserves something better (like children who obey, or less traffic, or a full time cook!).

Do I Continually Choose This on Purpose?

In many areas of our lives we have periodic events that help us renew commitments.  For example, I go to the dentist every 6 months and get my teeth checked which reminds me to recommit to dental hygiene.  We pay rent or a mortgage payment each month, which reminds us we are choosing to live in that apartment or home.  With our careers, we have yearly performance reviews and renew our contract periodically.  We also have these renewing events on our spiritual journeys: Christians take the sacrament or communion to renew their commitment to follow Christ, Hindus participate in fasts, Buddhists offer food as a sacrifice to show their devotion and earnestness.  All of these events and rituals give us a chance to stop, reflect, and choose to renew our commitments.

So what do we do to renew our commitment to motherhood or being a wife?  These are two of our most important roles, yet it’s easy stop deliberately “choosing” them; instead, we feel we are simply reacting to them or surviving in our roles.

Purposefully Choosing to Be a Mom in All the Moments

 As I waited in India for a new passport and visa I dearly missed my husband and my kids. I missed being part of their lives each day.   Life felt hollow without them.  I couldn’t control whether or not I was with my family.  I felt trapped NOT being with them.

In my hotel room I recommitted myself to being a wife and mom on purpose—even in the difficult moments.  I recommitted to showing up as the best mom and wife I could be.  I promised myself I wanted to be more present with my family and own all the parts of being a mom and a wife.  I realized that this included choosing the not-so-pleasant parts too.  I wanted to choose this role and deliberately be the mom I wanted to be, not just react to what happened to me each day.

Deliberate Motherhood

A few days later, with the help of some amazing people at the U.S. Embassy in New Delhi and some divine intervention, I was able to get a new passport and visa and fly home to my family.  It was such a sweet reunion and I loved being back with the people who matter most to me.

In the days since, I’ve been trying to remind myself: “I chose this, and I’m continuing to choose this.”

Choosing The Good

In the wonderful moments, like when we’re all snuggled up for movie night, when we’re having a discussion at family dinner, or when the kids are playing happily, it’s been easy to say “I choose this!”  Realizing that I’m renewing my commitment to choosing motherhood adds additional significance to the wonderful moments.

Choosing The Bad

When I feel bored playing Polly Pockets or changing my baby’s diaper and I think “I choose this,” Suddenly my boredom is replaced with gratitude. I notice little things l love like: my baby’s fat rolls on her wrists, the darling way she uses “y” instead of “l”, the tender way she wraps her arms around me and says “I love you.”   As I feel more gratitude, I naturally want to engage more and show up as the mom I love to be.

When I think “I choose this” when I offer to let my husband sleep in because he’s had a long week at work, I get to enjoy being up early instead of feeling resentful.  I feel like I’m in control and choosing to do it because I want to, not because I have to.  That makes all the difference in feeling joy about it, and feeling connected to my husband through it.

Choosing the Ugly

Saying “I choose this” when my kids are all needy after coming home from school has been more challenging.  But I’ve found that it takes the frustration out of my tone and I feel more connected to my kids when I’m helping them because I’m consciously choosing to do it.  Instead of feeling all their demands are coming at me and I just have to try to receive and meet them, I feel like I’m the actor.  I’m in control.  I’m the one choosing to meet their needs because I want to.  This feel empowering and I can calmly and clearly think and act to meet their needs in a way I feel confidant about later.

When my kids are whining refusing to help with chores, I’ve been trying to think “I choose this.”   Instead of going to my thoughts of frustration about how my kids are making my life hard–I’m able to access my creativity think more about how I can teach them cleaning can be fun and rewarding.  Instead of feeling like a victim, I feel like a leader.

The Power of Choosing

Saying “I choose this,” even when it’s not your ideal version of the situation stops the feeling that things are out of your control.  It stops the feeling that you are a victim.  That you are trapped.  It gives the power back to you!  Feeling empowered, we have better access to emotions like; gratitude, job, creativity, calmness, and leadership.  Not only do I feel better in the moment when I chose it, I feel better in the long run about how I show up as a mom or a wife.  Choosing is powerful.

Be a Mom on Purpose

Feelings like resentment, boredom, irritation, or blame can be good indications that you feel you are just reacting to your circumstances.  When is the last time you felt resentful, bored, irritated, or overwhelmed as a mom or wife?

Next time you feel this way, try to notice the thoughts you are choosing to think.  Consider replacing your thoughts with the phrase: “I choose this.” Choosing on purpose can change the way you feel about your situation and when you feel different–everything else changes too.

Hope is the Thing: Getting Through Grief

Grief is a heavy emotion.  It shrouds everything with a bit of a darker hue.  Even happy things don’t feel the same intensity of joy. One of the most difficult parts of grief is the illusion that it may last forever.   There are tender and sweet parts of grief that I would never give up.  And there is a secret I learned to getting through it.

Losing My Mother

This is a significant week for me.  It is the anniversary of my mother’s passing; 7 years ago we lost her to Ovarian cancer.  She was the emotional center of our home; mother of 6 children and married to my dad for over 30 years.  Her mother thought she looked like a vulnerable little robin bird with it’s legs all curled up when she was a newborn and named her Robyn. Throughout her life she loved birds and even chose the name “flight” as her camp name as a young adult.  This analogy of flight became significant for me in my process of grief.

She suffered with cancer for 4 years.  Even when it  was her time to go, it’s hard to ever be ready to say good-bye.  I was living in China, and sobbed all 18 hours of the flight home to Colorado.  I remember trying to write her a final letter, or say a final good-bye.  As much as I wanted to, I couldn’t quite get my mind around it.  How could I sum up on a piece of paper what my mother meant to me?  I gave up.

We were all surrounding her bedside as she took her last breath.  She had been in pain, and now she was free of her earthly bonds and strains.  We imagined her reunion with her parents, and her mother in particular who she had lost when she was only 14.

Those tender realities softened, but didn’t eliminate the difficulty of watching her lie lifeless on the bed, and be wheeled out of our home.  The finality of the gurney wheels and the car door closing made my heart ache.

The day of the funeral, I felt numb.    I greeted people and felt so genuinely loved and supported.  It all felt surreal; I didn’t really know how to process not having a mother.

Losing Myself

In the days that followed I felt adrift.  I’d think, “I need to call mom and ask her….oh.” I’d stop myself and remember there was no mom to call.

When my mother was alive, I would save up little things I wanted to tell her and write them on post-it notes around the house. I found myself still writing them. But, instead of calling they just accumulated.  Little situations, daily tasks and exchanges with others–totally un-related to my mom felt heavier and harder.  I was irritated more easily with others.

My mother was the one I depended on to remind me who I really was and give me a hit of courage when I needed it.  I watched her as my model of how to mother, how to do hard things, how to think about the world, how to be a woman.  All of that was gone.  I felt anchorless.  Where would I find my confidence and mentoring?

I had my mother’s picture in my hallway. Sometimes I felt like she was watching me.  I became hyper aware of all my imperfections and became self-conscious.  It was a dark time.  I cried myself to sleep many nights.  The emotions would well up at strange times—like a song on the radio, or when I saw her picture in the hallway.  There were bittersweet moments too–like standing on the Great Wall of China where she’d wanted to stand with her grandchildren, without her.

I felt that who I was had changed.  I felt like without knowing about this sentinel event in my life it would be hard for someone to fully understand me.  My identity was different.

Grief

Sometimes our grief is obvious if we have lost someone we love.  Other times our grief is less obvious if it is grief over a job loss, a spouse who changes, a divorce, a child who is struggling, poor health or the life we thought we would live.

The fog of grief has many sweet parts too–it is an indication of how significantly the person or thing you are grieving has influenced your life.  I believe that is part of grief’s role–to help us focus in on the imprint left behind.  Fully letting ourselves mourn the loss of something allows us to eventually let it go.

Letting it go often means letting a piece of ourselves go too, and replacing it with something deeper and more profound that we gain through the experience.  Each person’s grief journey is different and the circumstances surrounding loss often inform our grief process differently.

Hope is the Thing

I remember for a long time the feelings of grief were so raw it was difficult to own them sometimes.  I felt an affinity to anyone who had lost a parent—knowing they “knew.”  My cousins had lost their mother to Ovarian Cancer about 5 years before. One day, in a tender exchange my cousin Marie Jackson shared this with me:

“You’ll never stop missing your mother, but the pain becomes less acute over time.  One day you will be able to sit on your moms grave and eat popsicles and tell stories.”

I remember thinking about that over and over.  It planted in me a small hope that I could endure this pain—knowing it wouldn’t last at this intensity forever.  My mind began to think on a poem my Aunt Natalie had read at my mother’s grave-side service.

My Aunt Natalie lost both her parents, three siblings and a sister-in-law and many other loved ones. She knew loss. The poem she sharedwas elegant in it’s appropriateness.

“Hope” is the thing with feathers
By Emily Dickinson

“Hope” is the thing with feathers –

That perches in the soul –

And sings the tune without the words –

And never stops – at all –

And sweetest – in the Gale – is heard –

And sore must be the storm –

That could abash the little Bird

That kept so many warm –

I’ve heard it in the chillest land –

And on the strangest Sea –

Yet – never – in Extremity,

It asked a crumb – of me.

What is Hope?

It is a feeling of expectation and desire for a particular thing to happen. I love that analogy of hope as a bird. It’s perched in it’s nest, but has wings—which promise flight.  Those wings promise greater vistas and new experiences, even if they aren’t available now.

Finding Hope and Taking Flight

Over time I began to feel hope.  Not all the time.  But little moments of it—like little pockets of light in the darkness. I would notice how beautiful life was in glimpses.  I had a moment of joy watching my baby smile, my husband would make me laugh, or I would be enraptured by the all-consuming glory of a new blossom. These moments helped me realize the contrast between happiness and how I was seeing life most of the time.

It was almost as through I saw life through a filtered lens of grief most of the time. These moments of hope, reminded me that life would not always look this way.  Hope “sang the tune without the words and never stopped at all.”  It just kept gently reminding me of happiness and peace.

Little by little I began to feel hope more often. At times I’d sink back to a deep and painful place.  That was important.  I needed to be there.  Feeling pain acknowledged and gave voice to my loss.

However, I still needed the hope that I wouldn’t always be there.  Grief and healing are messy.  There isn’t a neat step-wise process you complete and “heal” from.  You don’t “get over” a loss.  But, in my experience over time the pain becomes less acute and the shroud of darkness over everything begins to lift with time.  The emotional and mental brain space the loss occupies becomes smaller and smaller over time and other things are allowed to take it’s place.

People who have never experienced the same type of loss can sometimes have a difficult time relating to the person who is grieving.  What To Say To Someone Who Is Grieving.  My aunt gave me some beautiful advice after my mom passed away.  She said, “Carve out space and help people help you grieve.”  I found that sometimes I had to ask a friend to listen when I needed it, or I needed to cry to my husband or my sister sometimes.  Raw emotion would catch me at moments I wasn’t expecting like a song on the radio, or seeing her handwriting on a recipe.

Often I would long for her when I was lonely or struggling.  I needed her encouragement.  No one quite replaces your mother.  She is the one person that doesn’t expect reciprocity. There is something so comforting about that.  My mother had lost her mother when she was only 14.

She always told us growing up that there were “compensatory blessings” that the Lord provides to help us compensate for the lack of other things.  I believed her, but wondered how that would play out.  There were certainly plenty of lonely moments that didn’t feel very compensated!

Over time I did see lovely divine interventions and compensatory blessings.  It never fully alleviated the ache of missing her or the absence of her in my children’s or my lives, but they did help. And, I found that I became a different person through the  experience–someone stronger, but also more reliant on God and connected to others in a way I hadn’t been before.

As I began to see my life could be beautiful–even though it was different than I’d planned or would choose, it gave me more hope.  Grief and hope wove a beautiful tapestry together and still has it’s ends unfinished.

Getting Stuck

Grief is a clean emotion—it’s cathartic and healing.  We absolutely need to let ourselves feel it fully in order to let it go.  However if we stay in it beyond what we really need, it can turn from grief to self-pity.

No one on the outside could ever determine when someone is in grief and someone is in self-pity.  It is something only the person can know on the inside. It is a tricky tightrope to walk between the two.  I know for me I knew I had crossed over into self-pity when I sometimes felt like a victim. Instead of feeling just sad about the loss, I began to resent others who didn’t understand or assumed they wouldn’t. Sometimes I expected others to feel sorry for me.  It wasn’t a place I hung out in often, but I certainly learned the difference between grief and self-pity.

Self-pity is not a clean emotion, it is an indulgent emotion.   I often felt worse after indulging in self-pity.    I love the way CS Lewis describes this  space.  In “A Grief Observed,” a book he wrote after his wife died he says, “I almost prefer the moments of agony. These are at least clean and honest. But the bath of self-pity, the wallow, the loathsome sticky-sweet pleasure of indulging it–that disgusts me.”

Allowing our selves to feel the full weight of grief is cathartic, it helps us process it and eventually let it go.  Conversely continuing to indulge in the “sticky-sweet pleasure” of our self-pity keeps us stuck.   It is when we cross this line between the two that we keep our feathers held down.  Hope can begin to wither and resentment and anger can take root.

Flying Free

After my aunt read Emily Dickenson’s poem at the graveside on the day of my mother’s funeral, my Dad had each of his children stand in a semi-circle.  He told us as a symbol of letting our mother go, he had bird for each of us to release.  One by one we each held a trembling white bird and let it fly into the air.  Meanwhile  the song “Amazing Grace” was playing.

As I let my bird fly free, it’s wings took it higher and higher until I could hardly make it out in the great expanse of the sky.  I feel grief is a little like that.  When it is close, it looms large and causes us to tremble.  As hope lifts us little by little, our grief becomes smaller until it is only a piece of us–not all consuming.

Hope Continues

It has been 7 years since my mother’s passing.  Last summer, we flew our children to Colorado and my husband and I took our four daughters to my mother’s grave. We sat around and told stories about my mom and ate treats as we talked.  A lot of healing has occurred in the intervening years.  I still miss my mother terribly, but my grief has lessened. As my cousin had promised, the rawness of the pain and longing is not as acute.  The more life moves forward and I feel more hope that there is so much beauty to be had in my future.

It’s joyful to talk about my mother.  I want my children to know her. With time, some of the holes she left have been filled by compensatory blessings—stronger dependence on God, a deeper connection with my husband, a new and richer interdependence with my sisters, finding wonderful mentors in friends and women in my community, and more courage to listen to my own heart.  The little bird of hope continues to sing the song and never stops at all.

Find Hope

What are you grieving?

1.  Grief is clean pain—it’s important to allow yourself to fully feel the loss.
2.  The human spirit is resilliant—it wants to feel hope.  As we notice and embrace our small hopeful moments they will grow and lift us to higher planes of happiness.
3.  Remember you can feel grief and hope at the same time.

The Science of Gratitude: Why Being Thankful Makes Us Happier

We often think about gratitude around Thanksgiving.  Many of us have heard or experienced that gratitude makes us happier.  Why?  Why does gratitude make us happier?

Gratitude Improves Your Health and Happiness

Over the past ten years, studies have repeatedly shown how gratitude improves both physical and emotional health.  Dr. Robert Emmons, the leading expert on gratitude and author of the book, THANKS! How the New Science of Gratitude Can Make You Happier, lists a number of specific health benefits he has observed in grateful people. They enjoy lower blood pressure, less pain, more energy, better sleep, stronger immune systems, and even a longer life. Studies show that grateful people are happier, experience less depression, higher self-esteem, feel less lonely, and are more likely to help others—which draws others closer to the people they help.

How Does Gratitude Make Us Happier and Healthier?

Knowing that gratitude makes us happy is helpful because it motivates us to be more grateful.  However understanding HOW gratitude helps us be happier can be even more motivating.   This will be a behind-the-scenes look at what science shows us happens to our brains when we are grateful.

Gratitude Changes the Chemistry of the Brain

Our thoughts actually stimulate various neurotransmitters in the brain which in turn create our feelings.  When we change what we are thinking, we change our feelings. Studies show that grateful thoughts cause the brain to produce more neurotransmitters of serotonin and dopamine. Seratonin is known as the “happy” hormone and lower levels of it are associated with depression.  Dopamine is the neurotransmitter that is responsible for causing us to seek out rewards…to eat, to connect with others etc.  The more dopamine we have the more likely we are to create happiness in our lives.  It’s powerful to realize that simply by deliberately placing thoughts in our brain about what we are thankful for, we can change our neurochemistry and shift it to happiness.

Dr. Robert Emmons, a psychologist at UC Davis and the author of the book, THANKS! How the New Science of Gratitude Can Make You Happier, did a study with individuals.  He asked 1/3 of them to write down daily what they were thankful for.  He asked 1/3 to write down things that irritated them. And, the last 1/3 could write down whatever they wanted each day.  After 8 weeks, he found that those who wrote down things they were thankful for were significantly happier.  Those who write down things that irritated them were less happy and those who wrote down whatever they wanted didn’t show a significant change in happiness.

Gratitude Helps Us Notice What We Take for Granted

It’s estimated that there is over 40,000 bit of data available to our brains at any one moment.  Just talking to someone takes up 2,000 bits and our brains can only process about 4,000 bits.   Since the brain can’t accommodate all the information available to us, it filters out information that seems irrelevant.  This is good—it helps us survive!  However, knowing this can also help us improve our happiness. We tend to filter out and not notice some of the things that actually mean a lot to us.  We take them for granted.  Gratitude simply brings our awareness of these important things back to the surface.  Thinking about them increases our happiness because it magnifies an authentic feeling we have and have shelved for efficiency’s sake.

Recently I got a new watch. I was so excited to open the box when it arrived.  It was even more beautiful in person than I had imagined looking at it on-line.  I was excited to put it on the next day. Every time I looked at it, it made me happy.  I felt grateful for the new watch.  But each day I noticed the watch a little bit less—it was a bit less novel to me and eventually it was just something I put on.  It didn’t bring me the same joy each time I looked at it.

Studies show that gratitude can re-create some of the same thoughts and feelings I had as when my watch was novel.  Simply by thinking about my watch and feeling thankful for it.  So, today each time I’ve looked at my watch I have been thinking about how grateful I am for it.  This simple act has made me smile several times.

Gratitude Changes the Way We See Everything

When you notice and express things you appreciate in others, you like them more.  It changes the internal story you have about that person in your head.  Even if it wasn’t negative to begin with, it changes the story we have about the other person.

Before bed we gather as a family and say a prayer.  We were having an issue with people whining about prayer, not wanting to be the one to say, poking each other etc.  A few months ago, our family started a new evening tradition. When we gather together we all take just a minute to mention something we’re grateful for about the person who says the prayer.  It can be a quality we admire, or something we noticed or appreciated that week.  Here are some of the ways it has changed the way we see things.

It Changes the Way We See Situations

This simple practice has transformed our family gathering.  There is no more whining about who says the prayer. We don’t have much poking or rolling around anymore.  Everyone perks up when it’s time to pray–probably because it’s created a positive feeling each night when it’s time to share things we love about each other.

It Changes the Way We See Ourselves

Each of us look forward to our day to say the prayer when we are “emotionally flooded” with appreciation.  It’s a moment we feel loved by the people we love most and we feel more connected to them. We feel differently about ourselves. When others notice good things in us, it’s easier to see them ourselves.

It Changes the Way We See Others

Even better, it has made a difference in the way we feel about each other.  I love getting a chance to verbalize what I appreciate about my husband and my kids. Expressing it out loud makes me feel more love for them.

We can change the way we feel about others simply by thinking grateful thoughts or writing them down.  But for a truly transformative experience, express thanks verbally to the person.  Science shows this causes happiness scores to skyrocket.

This is a short video that shows the transformative power of gratitude in about 7 min. simply from expressing thanks to others.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oHv6vTKD6lg

Cultivating Gratitude

1.  How happy would you rate yourself on a scale of 1-10?
2.  Write down what you are grateful for each night for 1 week or express gratitude to someone who has influenced your life by writing or in person.
3.  Re-rate yourself.  How happy are you on a scale of 1-10?