Perfection Pending

By Meredith Ethington

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In the Motherhood Motherhood Parenting

Moments Like This

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The morning started like any other. Getting kids off to school, packing lunches, and maybe a little bit of frustration thrown in. The older two were on their way, and my husband had long since left for work, and I just wanted my bed. It was one of those mornings where I had been dreaming of getting back in it from the moment I opened my eyes.

The four-year-old needed to get ready for preschool, but he still had an hour. He was begging to play games on the tablet already, and putting him off, I replied, “If you get all ready for school first” knowing that would keep him occupied a while.  He ran off excited at the prospect of screen time, and I headed for my room. I laid down, and dreamt of hours of rest I knew I wouldn’t get that day.

After he got dressed, I heard him rummaging in his sister’s room. I knew he was probably up to no good, but didn’t want to disturb the moment of quiet I was getting. He wandered in with a red finger light saber on his finger. It was his sister’s because his had broken almost immediately after he had gotten it. Because, four-year-olds.

He was happy having distracted himself from the task of getting ready for school. But, I looked at him, and knew I needed to steal a hug. “Come snuggle me” I said. He climbed into my lap and I breathed him in. In that moment, I thought about how quickly time is moving, and how big he was sitting in my lap now.

He laid on my lap babbling on when he said, “Mommy, when you go to the store with the dot in the middle and the circle around it, will you buy me one of these?” I knew he meant Target. I smiled. “Sure buddy. If they still have them.” and I squeezed him tighter.

It was a moment as ordinary as any other, but at the same time it wasn’t. Something in me switched. I re-focused, and suddenly, instead of dreaming of being alone for a few hours, I saw a day when I would actually be alone. I saw the day when he wouldn’t be there, and neither would my other children. I saw an empty lap, and a lump filled my throat.

As I breathed him in, he wanted to climb under the covers and see what his red finger light saber looked like. I climbed under with him. As we pulled the covers over our heads, he giggled at the sight of me doing something that he was doing. It was dark, and the little red glow of a toy I once threw into a Christmas stocking haphazardly, filled the space between us.

He talked non-stop and I watched. I took it all in. I savored how his eyes filled with wonder, and how when he said little it sounded like, w-ittle. I realized I was in a magical moment that wouldn’t last.  Just like that, I was begging for time to move slowly, but I knew it wouldn’t. So, I opened my eyes wide open and willed myself to remember. I watched and I thought to myself, “Will he remember this?” knowing that he wouldn’t. So, I vowed that I would.

We looked for shapes in the pattern of my comforter, and he asked me what kind of flowers it was that made up the pattern. We talked about how the red glow looked like a flashlight and looked way down into the deep abyss of the bottom of my king sized bed to see what was there. He tried making finger puppets and giggled when all he could do was wiggle a few fingers in front of the light.

A tear slid down my cheek as I thought of my older two at school. Did I do this kind of stuff with them? I wondered as I listened to him run off to get his blankie from the other room. He wanted to see what it looked like in the magical red light under the covers. Of course, I did this kind of stuff, I reminded myself. But, I was forgetting.

This is what motherhood should be, I thought.

Instead, it seems as if motherhood is just made up of the messy moments, the ones where you are yelling to get kids out the door for school, and negotiating exact number of bites they need to eat before they get dessert. It’s filled with frustration when you lose your tempter, and sadness when you mess up. Motherhood means guilt, and errands, and an endless amount of hours wasted looking for things. It’s filled with the mundane like laundry, and cleaning, and endless amounts of vacuuming smashed goldfish off the floor, and picking up legos. It’s fighting with a teenager about homework, and sitting in separate rooms wondering how you’ll make it through the next few years.

But, it’s truly magical too. It’s clean kids after a bath sitting in your lap reading a story, or crafts done on a whim with glitter all over our faces. It’s giggles and tickles, singing and laughing, jumping in puddles and running through the rain. It’s I-love-yous and hugs, and moments where you realize they are actually listening. It’s a child that’s happy for no apparent reason.

Moments Like This. A beautiful blog post about capturing the magical moments in motherhood.

And, it’s lying under the covers with a four-year-old watching a stolen moment with his mama bring him joy.

As mothers we are gifted these moments over and over again. It’s what takes our breath away and keeps propelling us forward to complete the mundane, and the ugly tasks that are also required of us. Because we know those tasks get us to the next magical moments like this.

When these moments happen, I crave for time to move more slowly instead of speed up. Wouldn’t it be nice if that’s all motherhood was made of? The moments where you hear them, and see them, and beg for more time with them? The moments where they know, as much as you do, that they are loved beyond measure.

But, just like that, I knew it was time for me to get in the shower. “After your shower can you climb back in here and we can do this again?” he asked as he saw me getting ready to leave our red glowing cocoon.

“No, baby.” I said as I stroked his cheek. “It’s time for school.”

And, like that, I threw back the covers and unveiled the bright sun streaming through my bedroom windows. I blinked at the stark contrast and I knew that even though the magical moment was over, I lived in it as long as I could.

And, that’s all a mother can do.

***
photo credit: always and forever via photopin (license)


5 Comments

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Comments

  1. jgroeber says

    May 11, 2016 at 11:37 am

    Oh, yes. Exactly that. The good news is there are new moments even though it’s always a battle to be present. The bad news, no more w-ittle, so much less snuggling under the comforter, and that taffy-stretching of time that happens with pre-school and the changing of the seasons, that changes so much. Still sweet, but more hard candy than taffy. Thank you for the beautifully written reminder. xo

    Reply
  2. Jill Robbins says

    May 11, 2016 at 11:38 pm

    You got me on this one. There’s such a huge disparity between my oldest one and my youngest two. I tend to look for these moments now, being seasoned and getting a do-over of sorts…but this. This makes me wish for my time back. Oh, what I would do. Beautiful, Meredith and I will surely share this week.

    Reply
  3. Megan says

    May 12, 2016 at 12:15 pm

    I love this! My oldest is turning four today, and I find myself tearing up a little as I watch him play, laugh at as his funny non-jokes, and realize he’s getting so big so fast. Thanks for the reminder, so beautifully written, of the simple and miraculous joy that comes from being a mom.

    Reply

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  1. Moments Like This, by Meredith from “Perfection Pending”. | The Forever Years says:
    May 15, 2016 at 6:02 pm

    […] Moments Like This […]

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  2. One Bad Day Does Not Make A Mother - Perfection Pending says:
    January 15, 2018 at 9:02 pm

    […] remind me to treasure the little things, and live in the moment.   This photo is from when I captured a moment I wanted to remember. I had my eyes open that day. It wasn’t a perfect day, but I wanted to […]

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Welcome! I’m Meredith.

Mom. Writer. Diet Coke connoisseur. Born and raised Texan. Lover of real talk and laughter with a hint of sarcasm mixed in.

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Meredith Ethington

perfectpending

Mom • Author • Mental Health Therapist In Training
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Night night! 😤 Night night! 😤
If you missed my last post about how raising teens If you missed my last post about how raising teens can wreck you mentally….wellll this is part of the reason why. So lonely! But we are in this together somehow. 😂 Make sure to check out my latest substack and grab a copy of my book —- The Mother Load!
NEW ---> "When there are problems in these big kid NEW ---> "When there are problems in these big kid years, it’s no longer really acceptable to call a friend and air the annoyances of the situation. At least not the specifics.

Sure, you can commiserate with a fellow parent about teenagers being the worst.

But, to be honest - they’re not the worst. They’re kind of amazing. But their problems make me tired to my core." 

Read the latest on my substack. I promise you'll relate. ❤️
So sweet. ❤️ Follow me @perfectpending and bet So sweet. ❤️
Follow me @perfectpending and better yet buy my book or subscribe to my substack to support me.
"I don’t know about you, but I don’t really wa "I don’t know about you, but I don’t really want same-ness anymore. I want messy. I want admissions that shit is hard and we don’t have it all together. I want to have a makeup free, messy bun in my sweats run in with a mom friend and not feel worried she’s checking out my un-groomed eyebrows.

I don’t want to try to give off this illusion that I’m control of my life any better than the next person. It’s a shitshow for all of us, and we continue to hide it for fear of what? Being human?"

Read the rest on my Substack. Link in profile.
WHAT IF THIS IS THE HAPPIEST I’LL EVER BE AND I WHAT IF THIS IS THE HAPPIEST I’LL EVER BE AND I MISS IT? What if I miss the best time of my life. What if it’s right this second?
What if it’s right now while I’m in finals week of grad school, and have a kid that’s sick? 
I already miss so much. The gummy smiles of babes without any teeth. The squeaky voices of 2 year olds. The babbling of a baby that’s just trying so hard to say mama. The grammar mistakes my kids make when they’re talking that I don’t have the heart to correct because I love it too much. 

I miss a lot about those younger years that have already slipped away. My youngest is sick, much like in this picture, but he is too big to snuggle in my arms now when he’s running a fever. 

Today I had the thought, what if this is it? What if this IS the happiest I’ll ever be?
For a moment, I lingered in that thought as I stood over my sink and did the dishes. I started to cry.
Am I missing it? AM I? I felt a tug that maybe I was. Maybe I wasn’t relishing enough, and enjoying enough, and being present enough.
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New year, same me. 😂 #mentalhealth #anxiety #de New year, same me. 😂
#mentalhealth #anxiety #depression
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I’ve got to admit - I’m kind of over all of th I’ve got to admit - I’m kind of over all of this. *sweeps arm generally at planet earth*

Look, I’ve never been a half glass full kind of gal. I can ALWAYS find the negative in every situation. 

But, right now it’s easy to say that I’m over it. It being.....

The state of our economy. Social media. People being unemployed. People being racist and homophobic. The debate over politics. People judging people. ALLLLLL of it. 

Everything is crap right now. We joke about it a lot. We have to in order to survive. 

It’s the one millionth day of January but Spring feels so far away. 

I’m over these four damn walls that we call home. 

Yeah, I know. Even as I’m typing this it all sounds like a bunch of ungrateful whiney BS. I hear it. I don’t need you to point it out, Karen. 

But, my guess is you’re reading this right now and realizing you’re over it too. Whatever “it” is in your life.

Some days the world feels like total crap. Everything is a mess. Everything costs too much. For E-V-E-R-Y-B-O-D-Y. 

Yes, even for you Karen. ➡️➡️ to keep reading.
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But, the loss of yourself in motherhood is real. And It’s not talked about enough." 

Do you feel like you lost yourself in motherhood? How? I really want to know. 

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Found in my pediatricians office. 🤣 What’s th Found in my pediatricians office. 🤣 What’s the moral of the story friends? If you think your household is always sick - it’s because they probably are. Kids make everything more germ-y
Here’s what I do know 👇 No one knows what th Here’s what I do know 👇

No one knows what they’re doing. 
We all feel like imposters. 
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