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Category Archives: Uncategorized

Good Enough

10 / 2 / 1710 / 2 / 17

Laura
Laura

If I had a nickel for everytime someone asked me what sports my kids do, I’d be able to fund one of them for an entire season of select soccer.

Laura
Anna
Anna

I know, right?!?

Anna
Laura
Laura

Not that my oldest is good enough or wants to play on any sort of select team!  I mean his first season of rec soccer was… how do I say this… sad? There was a big 0 in the win column!  

Laura
Anna
Anna

Oh man…. Well, it happens sometimes!

Anna
Laura
Laura

But he did have fun! And that’s what matters, right?! But I haven’t even started my almost 5-year-olds in a sport yet, and I think some people think I’m doing my children a huge disservice!?! Sigh… am I?

Laura
Anna
Anna

I don’t know… I mean, why all the pressure to have kids excel at a sport by age 8? I mean, I get it. We want them to be able to keep up later and build on their skills, but aren’t there more important things?

Anna
Laura
Laura

You mean like having fun together as a family or saving those nickels for college (or groceries… just saying… four boys can eat a lot)?

Laura
Anna
Anna

Ha–I can only imagine! And like having down time, and time to do chores, and help Mom cook dinner, and help Dad fix the car. I mean, those are skills too, but we never have time to do those things.

Anna
Laura
Laura

Exactly!  There’s so many things we want to teach our kids.  And back to the pressures thing…there are so many pressures on them at school with tests and everything else! And then we as parents seem to expect them to be perfect little athletes too?  

Laura
Anna
Anna

I think we do, unintentionally. We want them to be shining stars at all they do. 

Anna
Laura
Laura

Because if my kids are good at things, then in theory, other kids will like them and then their life will be happier and easier! Right? And, let’s not lie, when our kids are doing well, we look great as parents too!

Laura
Anna
Anna

Right. I mean parents have good intentions. We just want our kids to be successful. But how are we measuring that success? I wonder sometimes if we get out the wrong measuring stick.

Anna
Laura
Laura

Good point.  I think I’m very guilty of putting pressure on my kids to behave a certain way.  It’s sort of the same thing.  There is a much better way to determine who these little ones are than successes and outward appearances!

Laura
Anna
Anna

I’m also guilty of it! I care way too much sometimes what people think! And that my kids are measuring up or doing the same things as other kids. I never thought I would do that as a parent.

Anna
Laura
Laura

Me either. I don’t know how we got here, but you know what? We don’t have stay here!  

Laura
Anna
Anna

That’s a relief.  So how do we help our kids grow up with a different understanding about who they are? #thetruthaboutgrowingup

Anna
Laura
Laura

I think we start with the simple truth about who we are, right?  We are beloved creation of the Most High God.  And it’s the same for my kids!  Because I just want my kids to know they are loved for who they are and not what they do.  I’ve been down that road personally, of trying to do something to be loved.  It didn’t lead anywhere good.

Laura
Anna
Anna

Me too. And you can succeed for a minute, but it never ends up being enough. And people or circumstances can take away your success. And then what? You’re left wondering who you are. I want my kids to know that who they are, the value they have, that’s not something that anyone can take away from them.

Anna
Laura
Laura

They are gifted in just the way God wants them to be gifted.  And those gifts might make them good at something.  And they might even be on a select team someday.  Or maybe play the lead in our favorite musical! ?  But all the successes or failures do not equal their worth.

Laura
Anna
Anna

Yes–1,000 times yes. And as a mom, I want to be secure enough and brave enough to let my children grow at their own pace, with their unique interests, and be whoever God has designed them to be. Not who I picture them to be. Or who my friends’ kids are. But I want to watch with faith as they grow up.

Anna


Soaking in the Truth

Scripture to encourage you:

  • “The Lord does not look at the things people look at. People look at the outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart.” (1 Samuel 16:7, NIV)
  • “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, before you were born I set you apart;” (Jeremiah 1:5, NIV)
  • “See what great love the Father has lavished on us, that we should be called children of God! And that is what we are!  The reason the world does not know us is that it did not know him.  Dear friends, now we are children of God, and what we will be has not yet been made known.  Bet we know that when Christ appears, we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is.” (1 John 3:1-2, NIV)


    Music to inspire you:

  • “He Knows My Name” by Francesca Battistelli
  • “Every Bit of Lovely” by Jamie Grace

    Readings and Resources to come alongside of you:

  • We have to be secure in who we are before we can teach our kids to be the same way. I love this article: “Be Who God Created You to Be” by Shauna Neiquist
  • Read more about “How to Help Your Youth Find Their Identity in Christ” from Ministry Today.
    Four things to teach our kids about their identity and value:
    God created them on purpose in His image.
    God’s love does not fail, nor does it change towards them.
    God genuinely cares about the details of their lives.
    God created them with a purpose.


    Related Posts on Texting The Truth:

  • Decluttering Our Spiritual Closets
  • Hanging Up Our Measuring Sticks



    Living Out the Truth
    Ideas to try:

    • When failures come–a bad grade, a missed soccer goal, not making the musical, a call from the teacher–in the end, reassure him/her of who he/she is in God, His love, and that they are a beautiful creation.
    • I try not to compare one child to another, or one sibling with another one.
    • When they start to compare themselves, or get down on themselves, I say something like, “Good for them, but YOU are a whole different person. There’s only one of you, and you are amazing.”
    • I try to let my kids know what I love about them aside from their activities.  I love that they are kind or caring toward each other or toward their friends.  I love that when they are excited about something they jump up and down.  Whatever it is.  I try to tell them at night before they go to bed something that I love about their character, their personality, or maybe something they did because of that trait that they have.  
    • I have signs posted on their bedroom doors that say, “We love [name] because he is [name].”
    • When suffering consequences as toddlers, my boys always asked me if I still loved them.  I was shocked by this question when my oldest asked it, but wasn’t as caught off guard when the twin started asking it.  I’m sure the little guy will wonder the same thing.  At first my answer was, of course I do, but…..  However I’ve tried to change my words.  There isn’t really a but there.  And there isn’t a but in how God feels about me or my kids when we have gone wrong.  Or when we have done something well there isn’t I love you because you did well.  I try to phrase it differently.  You made a mistake and the consequences are hard to suffer, but I’m here for you because I love you.  Or great job playing basketball out there!  You really gave it your all!  And if you didn’t, I’d still love you!

    {These suggestions are ideas from novice moms. Sometimes our life situations need more. In that case, seeking out professional help is the right call.}

     

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Mom Win Wednesday: Katie Duh

9 / 27 / 17

Anna
Anna

September is NICU Awareness Month! And in honor of that, we are talking with a mom who experienced the NICU first-hand, Katie Duh. Welcome, Katie!

Anna
Katie Duh

Hi, Anna and blog readers! I’m happy to be here and share my story.

Anna
Anna

So Katie, tell us how your NICU story begins. Did you experience a normal pregnancy?

Anna
Katie Duh

Yes, I did. I never really expected to be a NICU mom. I had already had three healthy and perfectly uneventful pregnancies, three full-term deliveries, and three healthy babies. My fourth pregnancy was progressing just like the others, without any complications. I had just had a routine prenatal check-up a few days earlier and a perfect report of good health from my OBGYN.

And then, in the early hours of the morning after Christmas, my water broke. Suddenly and unexpectedly. I was 31 weeks. I found myself in the back of an ambulance for the first time in my life. The first 24 hours or so were a blur of doctors and nurses, painful contractions, doses of different medicines designed to stop labor, and disorientation and plummeting blood pressure as side effects of the medicine. By the next morning, though, it seemed the medicine was working and labor had stopped for now.

Anna
Anna

Oh wow, Katie! That must have been so scary. Did you get to go home at that point?

Anna
Katie Duh

It was, and I didn’t get to go home. A room in the ante-partum wing ended up becoming my home for nearly 2 ½ weeks. I continued to receive doses of medicine to ward off the contractions, as well as steroid shots to booster the lung development of my growing baby. The days ticked away slowly. I passed the time with my adult coloring book, binge watching Downton Abbey episodes on my Kindle Fire, reading, starting (but not finishing) a knitted baby blanket, and memorizing the hospital food menu.

As a mom, I think we all long for a little down time. But let’s just say, after the first couple hours the silence becomes stifling. I think I survived those days thanks to incredibly thoughtful friends, especially one who had experienced hospital bedrest herself several years earlier and could talk me through the roller coaster of emotions.

Anna
Anna

Shout out to your friends!!! Just another example of why we need the love and support of our friends. So what happened next?

Anna
Katie Duh

Well, let’s just say that when I first became a mom 7 ½ years ago, a friend asked me how the transition from working to being a stay at home mom was going. I remember saying I loved it, but that I also often got to the end of the day feeling like I hadn’t really “done” or accomplished anything. I still feel like that sometimes as a stay at home mom, but being confined to a hospital room for 2 ½ weeks brought those feelings to a whole new level. I really couldn’t do anything that I wanted to – and there was really nothing of significance that I could do.

Anna
Anna

Oh… I can totally relate to that, Katie. I was sick once for only a week, and I remember feeling that way. Do you think you were learning anything during this waiting time?

Anna
Katie Duh

YES… There is my life-long battle with control and perfectionism. I believe God’s been chipping away on those underlying tendencies, gradually, piece by piece for several years now. Let’s face it, mothering through the infant and toddler stages quickly shows us we will never be perfect and strips away our sense of being in control. Hospital bed rest strips it away even further. Especially when you have a 20-month-old daughter at the time, who can’t begin to understand why Mom can’t come home. So, every time she visits you, she screams at the top of her lungs. But you are completely helpless to do anything for her.

Anna
Anna

That is just a heart-wrenching situation, Katie.

Anna
Katie Duh

It was. and then, at 33 weeks and 2 days, my baby boy decided he was ready to make his appearance. He was 4lbs, 5 oz. when he was born. After a couple brief, precious moments of holding and snuggling my newborn, he was whisked away to the NICU. Here’s a picture of him: 

Anna
Anna

Oh my goodness! So tiny. So vulnerable. How were you feeling at that point?

Anna
Katie Duh

Three times before, a nurse had pushed me in a wheel chair down the long hallways from the delivery room to the postpartum room. Each of those times, I remember holding my baby and beaming with joy. All of the hospital staff and visitors would glance in our direction and break into an involuntary smile, uttering a “Congratulations!” or “So precious!” as they past.

This time was different. The same chair. The same long trip down the same long hallways. But this time there was no baby in my arms. This time everyone we passed averted their eyes. Because a woman in a wheelchair heading to a postpartum room without a baby meant something had gone wrong. When we arrived in our room, the little bassinette sat prominently in the middle as it always does. But this time, with no baby, it only served as another reminder that something was not right. Throughout the night, I could hear the cries of the newborns in the rooms next door. Yet another reminder of what was missing in my room.

In the NICU, my son was hooked up to what seemed like countless wires, tubes, and monitors. For the first couple days, he received fluids through IV and then through a feeding tube before being permitted to take any liquid by mouth. But the steroids had done their job; he never needed any breathing support. I spent every minute I could sitting by his crib, holding him when I was allowed to – when he didn’t have to be under the lights due to his high bilirubin numbers.

Anna
Anna

Oh Katie, was it so hard seeing him that way?

Anna
Katie Duh

It was. And after two nights, I was discharged and had to leave the hospital. I had known for several weeks that this time would come, but nothing could have really prepared me for the moment of leaving my baby at the hospital and walking out the front door. I cried most of the 45 minute drive home. My sweet husband had bought me the yummiest food (remember, I’d only had hospital food for weeks?) and I couldn’t wait to see my older three kids again. I was so thankful for my mother, who had dropped everything to come and stay with us. But, I didn’t want to leave my baby.

Our son spent a total of 8 days in the NICU. I left my house every morning to make the long drive to the hospital and spent the whole day at his bedside, leaving to head back home every evening. Those days were full of coaxing him to learn to nurse and take a bottle, weight and temperature checks, and bilirubin counts. They were lonely and long, but also full of sweet moments of newborn snuggles. I met the mother of the twins in the cribs next to my son. Her story, her strength, and her smile encouraged me. We reminded each other that Jesus knows and sees all – and our babies were in His more than capable hands.

Anna
Anna

Katie, I love how your story is full of both the struggles and the blessings.

So you didn’t have to stay through his original due date?

Anna
Katie Duh

No, we didn’t! The nurses and doctors all began to rave about my son’s progress. I almost couldn’t believe it when they said we could take him home! I had been told to expect a NICU stay as long as the time up to my original due date (which would have been around 7 weeks). Instead, when we took him home he was 8 days old  – and, after the initial weight loss, he was back up to barely 4 pounds.

I am well aware that our time in NICU was extremely short in comparison to many other families. And any ongoing health concerns related to my son’s prematurity have been minimal. I feel like our brief experience with hospital stays has renewed my deep respect for parents whose children are battling significant, long-term health or developmental concerns. They are truly super heroes in my mind. I only got a brief glimpse of the emotions of watching your child in a hospital bed. Of not being allowed to eat in their hospital room, but not wanting to leave their side – so having to force yourself to remember to eat. Or sleep.

Not until his 18-month well-visit did my son meet all the developmental milestones on the pediatrician’s checklist for his age. So, I also got a small taste of the nervousness and knot in my stomach before each doctor appointment, waiting and wondering what I would hear that my son wasn’t doing yet that other kids his age were. Many parents experience these emotions and more on a daily basis, with such incredible grace and strength.

Anna
Anna

I completely agree, Katie! The parents who experience this regularly are real-life super heroes for sure!

Can you share with us a current picture of Peter and your family?

Anna
Katie Duh

Absolutely. And here we are today!

So this September, during NICU Awareness Month, I’d like to honor all those NICU parents out there. And to thank God for my own 4 kiddos, who are teaching me every day to worry less about what I am “accomplishing” and more about how I am being faithful in the day-to-day.

If you would like to be featured as a Gold Medal Mom or you know someone who would, please contact us here!

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