“I NEED LOVE!” I bellowed, from the master bathroom, adjacent
to our bed. This is the not-so-subtle, passive-aggressive method I use to gain
his attention this morning.
My husband, who had been waking up slowly, scrolling his
phone as he lay there cocooned in blankets, drops his device as if it has
suddenly caught fire and burned him, and is at my side in a flash.
I am under slept, feeling sour, and dreading the day in its entirety
so I proceed to woefully list off to my husband, all the reasons my life is
terrible.
“I’ve been stuck at home for three of the last four days
with sick kids. I let them watch 8 full hours of shows yesterday which turned
them into little devils. They are fighting constantly (well, except when the tv
is on, but even then, they argue over what to watch) and anytime the tv is off,
Emma follows me around the house and tells me she’s bored. The house is a wreck.
And I don’t feel appreciated for the volunteer position I just finished. I can’t
go on a run to burn off some of this angst because I have all these kids and
they are like anchors, holding me back. Plus, they are sick so they might make
it a whole block before collapsing. Jack only has four more days of preschool
left in his life and then summer hits full tilt and alone time with be a scarce
commodity. I signed him up for Lunch Bunch these past two days to buy me some
extra time to write because I am FREAKING DESPERATE but since the girls were
home sick, I just paid extra and wasn’t even alone! And now there is only one
more day of Lunch Bunch left, and I think I just might die. The weather has
been so crappy and it is making me feel really down and I’m weaning off one of
my antidepressants because I think it is giving me night sweats, but, based on
the way I’m feeling, I’m not so sure it’s a good idea anymore. And this morning
I’m supposed to have a dermatology appointment but now I have to haul the sick
kids along with me – minus Isla who I think is well enough to go back to school
today but that means I have to leave her home alone which I feel super guilty
about because she’s only nine but if I took her to my appointment, it would
make her late for school - and I’m super annoyed that just because I don’t have
a paid job, all the care and arrangements for the kids falls on me. And
speaking of jobs, I think I want one because this
full-time-stay-at-home-motherhood gig does not seem to suit me and money is too
tight but who will watch the kids if I do work and really I just want to be
able to pursue my dreams which unfortunately don’t seem to compensate monetarily.
But I feel called to do them and yet I can’t seem to find the time and – oh yeah
did I mention that these dreams won’t likely pay so how am I going to buy the
help I need in order to pursue them? I feel like I’m in a vicious cycle and I
don’t have time to do anything I want to do. I can’t seem to accomplish anything.
And ALSO. I vacuumed these bathmats yesterday and look! There are already
grassy footprints on them. I give up! WHY DO I EVEN TRY?”
Graham, who had been taking in my every word, looks at me,
solemnly. “Wow,” is all he can formulate. “That seems like a lot.”
Ha.
As I type these words now, I’m seated on the cold tile of my
kitchen floor with the laptop across my legs. My butt cheeks are 100% asleep
and I’m leaning against the hard cabinets at my back. Come to think of it, I
could really use a pillow behind me. To my right, the piano bench is toppled on
its side, blocking off one side of the island. The overturned coffee table on
my left, along with rags stuffed into any gaps, obstructs the exit on the other
side of the island. A spoonful of peanut butter and a handful of sunflower
seeds sit on a plate next to me along with a screwdriver - the tool, not the
drink! But for sure the drink would make this situation 1000% better right now
- which I used to remove the kick plate at the base of our dishwasher. This is
my very first moment alone in over a week and do you know how I’m spending it? Trying
the lure out my middle daughter’s pet hamster who escaped her cage overnight
and has set up camp in the bowels beneath our kitchen cabinetry. How is this
even my life!?!
Most of the intricacies of my days feel laughable,
ridiculous, and I can’t believe this is how I pass my hours, breaking up
fights, throwing away pairs of tiny underwear that are too far gone with this last
accident to redeem. I really don’t recall hamster rescuing being on my job
description. Among the million other oddball roles that seem to make up this thing
called “Motherhood.”
“I’m educated!” I preach at myself. “I am capable! I have
things to offer!” But if anyone were measuring my visible day-to-day productive
output, they might argue differently. I am struggling immensely with a lack of
fulfillment in the way I spend my hours right now. I feel like I am in an early
mid-life crisis of sorts, trying to find myself, my worth, my value and my purpose.
I’ve been trudging through a personally grueling season of being “in between”
and it’s growing rather apparent that it doesn’t look very good on me.
I sincerely thought that life would look different for me after
I quit my (paid) job. To be frank, and I think I’ve said this before, I didn’t
quit to spend more time with the kids (who, despite the tone of this post, I do
actually adore!) I was working part-time when I officially bid my job adieu, so
I still saw them plenty, and was not feeling a shortage of quality time in
their company. The reason I quit that job was because I was unhappy in it and I
didn’t want to look back in 10 years and realize I’d wasted away my life, undervalued
and feeling invisible, in a position I didn’t love. Instead, I wanted to write.
Maybe speak some, about what exactly, I wasn’t entirely sure, but I figured the
pieces and opportunities would just fall into my lap. And they sort of did. For
a little while.
I’m not sure what I envisioned for my life as a writer. For
sure, I figured I would be doing, well, a whole lot more writing. But it hasn’t
really panned out that way and I’m wrestling hard with my feelings about it. I read
a lot of about writing, how to write, how others have been successful at it,
but thus far, these sorts of books have only served to make me feel smaller,
less equipped, more inadequate. Anyone who does it will concur - the writing
life sucks! Like why would anyone choose to subject themselves to this sort of
lifestyle on purpose? Here, just pen down your most personal thoughts
and feelings, and then post them on your chest for the world to attack, criticize,
and sometimes, on a good day, agree and whisper, “Me too.” Writing isn’t for
the faint of heart, and it certainly isn’t for the thin-skinned either.
All this to say, “quitting my job to write” isn’t looking exactly
the way I’d hoped. I’ve been doing a lot more flailing than I have been moving
forward favorably. I’m struggling with a general feeling of invisibility as a mom.
It seems to be an underlying theme throughout my life, this struggle with
feeling invisible and undervalued. Graham noted the irony – I quit one job
where I felt invisible and now am doing another where I feel increasingly so. The
sum of this equals a lot of disappointment to wade my way through.
I know full well the tremendous value of mothers, of the
significance of the work we do. I would be the first to tell any mom struggling
similarly that her job is the most important in the world. But it doesn’t
change the fact that I still have these emotions, that our culture doesn’t value
us well, that I feel unfulfilled, and that I personally have a pile of negative
thoughts and unmet expectations to work through. It may also mean that full
time stay-at-home motherhood is not the only thing I am called to, even though this
fact causes tidal waves of guilt to come over me.
Since I can’t seem to make the writing thing happen with
kids underfoot, I’ve started to dapple elsewhere. I feel a very real pressure
(from no one other than myself, and in my defense, I do happen to be the one
who does the budgeting around here) to find some sort of part-time work to help
make ends meet. I don’t know how and even whether this will ever pan out but
the idea both excites me (slightly) and grieves me (tremendously). I have
realized an undeniable internal desire to be compensated for my work (and is
there a more poorly compensated or thankless job than motherhood in our
culture?) At the same time, I am already mourning my loss of freedom. How can I
reconcile the two? I’m not ready to surrender my hope that I can somehow figure
out a way to do life-giving work that also compensates. Does this seem too far-fetched?
My bathroom monologue that engulfed Graham at the beginning
of this post illustrates the place I go when I’m not doing enough of the things
that give me life. I see everything through a negative lens. On the one hand, I
want to take this outburst with an extremely large granule of salt, but on the
other, don’t our baseline feelings and frustrations come out most when we no longer
possess the energy to filter or sensor them? They pour forth in their rawest
form.
I wish I had more answers to accompany the many questions that
I’m asking. I recognize that I need to make some changes (and recognizing you
have a problem is the first step!) These changes could look like me making
peace with and learning to embrace the job I currently find myself in. Or it
could look like me making a change and getting a (paid) job once all three kids
are in school in the fall (full disclosure: I’m regularly perusing job openings
at local plant nurseries). Or, also come fall, it could look like me surrendering
the desire to be compensated, no longer allowing the dollar amount I bring in
determine my value, and instead pour my heart and soul into this writing thing
that I love even if it never amounts to anything or if I don’t have a
final product to show for it at the end of the day. It could mean I just do it
because it makes me feel alive and healthy and because it is my art form in a
world that desperately needs beauty in the midst of brokenness. I kind of hope
this last option is the one I land on, but we’ll see.
I share all this today in hopes that it speaks to someone out
there somehow, someone who is feeling lonely and unfulfilled, either in a paid
job in the workforce, or at home where the compensation comes only in the form
of hugs and goodnight kisses. Both are difficult places to be and you aren’t
alone. It’s okay to wrestle. And we will get through it, even when it's messy and unglamorous, and we find ourselves using our college-educated brains to rescue pet hamsters. Even then.
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posted by kelsie