a friend of mine sent me an email with a post titled ‘To be a Mom’ in it.
i’m not sure why she sent it – i can’t remember if it was part of something i had asked her to write or if she had just decided this was something needing to be written and had sent it to me.
what it did though was spark something inside of me: What if i gave that out as a framework to a bunch of my friends – all they get is ‘To be a Mom’ and then write a post on however that inspires, informs or directs them? – a brilliant idea, and if only i could claim it as my own.
What would you write, if the only thing you were given was the words, ‘To Be A Mom’?
Here are the stories that were shared with us as a result:
Not Your Typical Fairytale beginning – Bek Curtis
It Means All These Different Things – Candice Fourie
Intersection of Momness, Wifeness and Professionalness – Meet Lauren McGill
Be slow to judge – Meet Mandy Lea Friedrichs
Not sure I want to be a mom right now – Lily Dunn
From someone without her own biological children – Tshego Motiang
[…] I gave the phrase ‘To Be A Mom’ to a number of people and this is how they responded […]
[…] My initiation into motherhood didn’t begin with a pretty white dress, two rings on my finger, a Christian husband who’d vowed to love me for life, or a mature and well thought out approach to ‘family planning’. Nope, it was quite the opposite actually. Instead, as a drug addicted, just turned nineteen year old, partying at a bar with friends renowned for its bikie population, I met my Prince Charming. Actually, I met some random good-looking bad boy who was a prospect for the Hell’s Angels. And so, with the knowledge of his first name, and age (27), I accompanied him home… To play chess, you see. Soon after our first introduction, we began ‘dating’ (I use the term loosely). And a few weeks later, BOOM-pregnant! Just like that. Who knew chess had such life-long consequences! My relationship with biker boy was never going to last. We were world’s apart, and although he didn’t think it was a good idea for me to have a baby at such a young age, he still respected my decision to continue with the pregnancy and raise this unexpected child. And so, we parted ways. He alone, me with burgeoning belly. As a single, pregnant, nineteen year old, self-detoxing from a cocktail of drugs, woman, my journey into motherhood was never going to be easy. I was the only child of divorced parents, living in a low socioeconomic area. Teen pregnancy was the norm, I was acutely aware that I’d just become another statistic. But I made a decision. I was going to be different, I was going to break the mould and I was going to break the poverty cycle! I might even study to become a lawyer! Yes! I would make a difference indeed! And so my baby boy arrived, I was a mum. Motherhood came easily for me. And I don’t say that with even a hint of conceitedness, truly, it was just the only thing I had ever, and have ever really known what I was doing (we’re only just into the teenage years, I’m aware this could all change!). But I guess that being so young also meant that I had the advantage of ignorance. Yes advantage. I’d never read parenting books, I certainly had no mummy friends to swap notes or make comparisons with. It was innate instinct and Holy Spirit baby rearing. Thankfully it was during my early pregnancy that I decided to do things God’s way….most of the time. Remember how I was gonna break the status quo? Yeah, I showed them! I got my law degree whilst being a single teen mum! I lie. Actually, when my son was 14 months old, I became pregnant, again, after an über short-term relationship. Sigh. Some behaviour patterns prove harder to break than others. Though this time, I’d not hooked up with a biker. Instead a chef, a young man the same age as me, who decided he wanted to do the right thing and make me a wife. And he did. Exactly six months after we began dating, just in time for Lady M to arrive. And so, I spent pretty much the first 10 years of motherhood, trying to prove to everyone that I wasn’t a complete screw up, that despite my background I could raise healthy, intelligent, obedient, polite and caring kids. To be a mum, meant that at all times, in all places, you maintained composure and tended quietly to the perfect angels that you were parading. To be a mum like that was lonely. It wasn’t until Jordan, aka chef boy, and I had been married 5 years and settled into our instant family married life, that we felt like we had the right to plan for a third child. We knew we’d disappointed so many people, especially from his side. Let’s be real, it’s not like you really want your son to fall in love with some chick from the wrong side of the tracks, let alone one who already has a kid! Don’t get me wrong, people were supportive, but we weren’t entirely stupid, we’d heard the whispers, seen the tears, felt the vibe. It’s not like people were excited for us. Choosing to have a baby, in wedlock, with mindful planning was an entirely new experience. That pregnancy was when I really stepped into the role of motherhood and felt like I’d earned it, not that I’d had to prove I was worth it. I finally owned it, along with my own mothering style, quirky as it often seemed to others. For I have always believed I am not raising children, but instead raising people who with become adults and must learn the responsibilities that come along with it. Yes, ironic and somewhat hypocritical coming from me, but I’d learnt these lessons the hard way, best I do all in my power to prevent my kids doing the same. Motherhood became a symbol of responsibility, maturity. But it was around this time that I also realised, that mums are allowed to have their own personality. We are allowed to have a life outside of our children. It’s actually okay if your kids aren’t the absolute centre of your universe at all times! I’m going to take it a step further, it’s ok if your husband is in fact your primary responsibility, above the kids! Yep, just said that. And no, I’m not talking from some submissive, anti-feminism, wife point of view, quite the opposite. I speak purely from a equal, friendship, partnership perspective. And so the traditional thoughts of motherhood, martyrdom, and baking that I’d long held onto, started to dissipate. I can no longer answer the question of what it means to be a mum, because it takes all forms. There are a handful of phenomenal older (not old!) women in my life, who mother me spiritually and emotionally. I have childless friends who carry fearless and nurturing mother traits that will never be used on biological nor adoptive children of their own, and yet they mother. I have two amazing kids from my church family, who call me ‘Mum’, and another who calls me ‘Mama B’. I am not their mother, and yet there are some levels, different with each of them, on which I mother them. My heart aches for injustice that has been done to them and I know God has placed upon me a burden to speak life back into the parts of them that have been neglected and broken. There have been times during my marriage, where I have experienced heartbreaking personal circumstances, and in those moments, some of the greatest and most healing mothering came from my husband. It is only within the last three years that I have been able to identify and relate to Father God. Up until that point, I just couldn’t trust a God who might be a Father. And do you know what? God never asked me to see Him that way, instead, up to that point, for thirty years, He mothered me. He is not threatened by our disbelief or anger. To be a mum is to see a need in the life of someone else and fill it. What form that takes, how that looks, what gender enacts it, I don’t know, but I know it’s far more diverse than can be expounded upon. What I do know is this, the best of mothers that I have personally come across, are those who are intimately tuned in and obedient to The Father’s Heart, and you know what, the Father’s Heart and a Mother’s heart aren’t too dissimilar . -Bek Curtis [To read more stories inspired by the phrasxe, 'To Be A Mom' click here] […]
[…] [For more stories on the theme of 'To Be A Mom', click here] […]
[…] [For a variety of different stories based on the phrase, 'To Be A Mom' click here] […]
[…] [For a whole range of other stories arising from the phrase 'To Be A Mom', click here] […]
[…] [For more stories looking at the concept of 'To Be A Mom', click here] […]
[…] [For a whole series of 'To Be A Mom' posts, click here] […]
[…] [For a whole collection of posts on the theme of 'To Be A Mom' click here] […]
[…] [For a whole series of 'To Be A Mom' posts, click here] […]
[…] still really wrestling with in my life right now. Brett has an entire series on his blog called “To Be a Mom” that you should check out if you want to hear some great perspectives on motherhood. (I was the only […]