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Tag Archives: identity

Be Mom Strong: Finding Our Identity

4 / 16 / 184 / 19 / 18

Emily

(deep exhale).  It’s been *a* morning.  You know, one of those mornings where I can’t seem to catch my breath, but I’m sitting down wondering what I did exactly for the last 5 hours?! ?

Katie

Oh, I can so relate! My morning has mostly consisted of changing a certain two year old’s clothes (the joys of potty training!??) and wiping crumbs off my kitchen table.

Emily

Sounds very familiar.  I did attempt to run a simple errand with the boys, but it was right on the brink of nap time, so the adventure ended in a rather embarrassing public meltdown (them, not me thankfully). ?

Katie

Lol. Definitely been there and done that!?

Emily

I don’t know about you, but sometimes I forget about the days of going into work bright and early (showered, might I add), putting in a full day, and coming home to a quiet house.  It feels like a lifetime ago!

Katie

Yes, it does! How life has changed! And, you know, when I was teaching the days weren’t necessarily easy, but at the end of each one, I did feel like I had accomplished something. I came home feeling a different sort of tired than I feel these days.?

Emily

Totally. Working a full-time career provided me with measurable outcomes, checklists, and results that I could see. ✓✓✓

Katie

I love checklists!? And results that I can see … don’t get much of that in the day-to-day of mothering.

Emily

Not so much.  I recently heard parenting compared to running a marathon; the days of raising up children are definitely more of a slow and steady race ?, where we don’t always see fruit (i.e. results) quickly.

Katie

Yep. And because I can’t see immediate fruit, I sometimes start to wonder what I’m really doing during these days filled with potty training and tantrums at the store?? I mean, what is significant about what I’m doing?

Emily

Yes! Sometimes I have this repeat conversation with God, that goes something like, “I know you’ve called me to this, more than you’ve called me to any other role, but why don’t I feel a sense of significance/value in what’s before me?”

Katie

I have had the same thoughts! I know that what I am doing as a mother is important, but it’s hard to always feel significant when the results aren’t visible or noticed, which I think is what I’ve realized I miss about working full-time. I miss having someone else tell me that I’m doing a good job.

Emily

Me too!! Those words of affirmation went a long way in motivating and encouraging me.  So much of being a mom goes unnoticed– especially the mundane, day-to-day tasks.  I’ve realized over the last five years since becoming a mom how much of my identity was wrapped up in both the work I did and the praise and affirmation I received. ??

Katie

Yes! From striving to get good grades in high school to looking for praise in my career and to now wanting to please every mom friend I have … I think I’ve also let my identity be determined by what I do and what other people think about what I do. Why do I do that?!?

Emily

I’m right there with you, friend.  And while those accolades are nice, they don’t offer any truth about who God says we are.  The praise of others will always change, but what God says about our identity in Him will always remain the same, regardless of the season we find ourselves in as mothers. ?

Katie

So, so true! Nothing will ever change that God made me and loves me. Seems so simple, but I think I need to repeat that truth over and over to myself. Because if I really understand that – deep, deep down in my heart – then I won’t need visible results and someone else’s praise to tell me I am significant. My identity is secure, because I am made and loved by God.

Emily

Indeed☝. I know when I walk confidently in those truths, it impacts my countenance, the grace that I extend to my children, and freedom I have in my other relationships.  I can hold my head high, even in a difficult moment like today (i.e. public meltdown). When God’s Word is at the foundation of my identity, it truly flows into all areas of my life.  

Katie

Amen, sister. Now I can get back to potty training with a whole new mindset.?

Soaking in the Truth

Scripture to encourage you:

  • “… I am fearfully and wonderfully made …” (Psalm 139:14, NIV)
  • [Jesus said] “I no longer call you servants … Instead, I have called you friends … You did not choose me, but I chose you.” (John 15:15-16a, NIV)
  • “He chose us in Him before the foundation of the world to be holy and blameless in his sight. In love He predestined us to adoption as sons through Jesus Christ, in accordance with his pleasure and will.” (Ephesians 1:4-5, NIV)
  • “Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart, as working for the Lord, not for human masters, since you know that you will receive an inheritance from the Lord as a reward. It is the Lord Christ you are serving.” (Colossians 3:23-23, NIV)

Music to inspire you:

  • Who You Say I Am, Hillsong
  • Legacy, Nichole Nordeman
  • Live Like You’re Loved, Hawk Nelson

Readings and Resources to come alongside of you:

  • “Again, your identity, mama, is ultimately that you are a woman made in the image of God and a saint redeemed by Christ on the cross. Your identity is not found in what you do, but in Whose you are.” — Rebekah Hargraves from Lies Moms Believe: And How the Gospel Refutes Them
  • Captivating: Unveiling the Mystery of a Woman’s Soul by John and Stasi Eldredge. (This book was very influential in helping me understand who I am as a daughter of God.)
  • Mom Set Free: Find Relief from the Pressure to Get it All Right by Jeannie Cunnion
  • Becoming Mom Strong: How to Fight with All That’s in You for Your Family and Your Faith by Heidi St. John

Related Posts on Texting The Truth:

  • Real Security, Real Strength
  • In the Absence of Affirmation

Living Out the Truth

Ideas to try:

  • Several years ago, I took some time to look up Scriptures about who God says we are and how He views us. I typed up those verses and posted them where I could see and reread them regularly. Try to make your own list of favorite verses this week, and let His truth soak deeply into your heart and mind!

{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 Follow-up with Laura

4 / 11 / 184 / 11 / 18

Anna
Anna

So glad you are here to share with us some of the background of where this week’s text originated.  Could you explain this recent struggle in a little more details?

Anna
Laura
Laura

Sure! So I mentioned in the text earlier this week that I caught one of my boys stealing from his classmates.  In that text we talked about a rather new experience for me which was the ability to separate myself from my boy.  And while that is true and it was a very freeing experience, it was still a very difficult situation to walk through with him.  

Laura
Anna
Anna

I bet!

Anna
Laura
Laura

His school’s system for behavior expectations focuses on positive reinforcements.  One thing students can earn are called spirit sticks. They are little embroidered strips with a positive phrase on them like “owl-standing work” or “batting 1000” or “you’re the cat’s meow.”  These sticks are placed on key rings and worn on backpacks by everyone at the school.

My son lives for spirit sticks! Over the last several weeks he would occasionally get off the bus with one or two sticks claiming that he found them on the bus.  We talked about how he should probably turn these in to the bus driver in case someone noticed they were missing. He had never given me major reasons to mistrust him before, but I could tell something was going on with these spirit sticks he was “finding.”

I assumed he was trading various “trinkets” from his bedroom for other kids’ spirit sticks.  I really did! But what I found out was much worse.

Laura
Anna
Anna

What happened?

Anna
Laura
Laura

One day over spring break I changed the sheets on his bed.  I found hidden under his pillow about 75 spirit sticks, some whole key rings full of them.  I was honestly shocked. And I realized that we had a BIG problem on our hands! How did he get all these?  How are other kids not realizing that their spirit sticks are missing? Questions flooded my mind.

Laura
Anna
Anna

How did you confront him with the problem?

Anna
Laura
Laura

Even though I was upset and part of me wanted to confront him immediately, I decided to wait to see if he came to me when he realized I had found them.  This also let me process a little bit what I might say. I was still under the impression that he was trading for these or possibly taking them from kids on the bus.

After a few days of him not mentioning my discovery, I decided to look for an opportunity to confront him.  One night, one of his brothers took something from his room which greatly upset him, and I had on open door of opportunity!  I crawled into bed with him that night to talk about how he felt when his property was taken. I asked him what it might feel like if someone else took something without him knowing it.  He talked to me about how he would be mad and maybe even sad that he had lost his stuff. Then I asked him if there was anything he wanted to tell me about. It took him several minutes to finally decide to tell me the truth.  He confessed that he was taking them from his classmates at the end of the day during story-time as they waited to be dismissed to busses. He would take them while they were listening to the story and just slip them in his pocket. He would lie and tell me that he found them on the bus.

Laura
Anna
Anna

Wow. I don’t know what I would have done.

Anna
Laura
Laura

I didn’t really know what to do either.  It just felt so wrong. In that moment, I really just wanted to know why he would do that.  So I asked him. He said that he wanted more spirit sticks than he had because he wanted other kids to think he was a really good student.  He also said that he thought he was doing a pretty good job in school and that he had gotten very few spirit sticks. Like no one was noticing that he was doing a good job.

I was so sad.  I could feel some questions lingering in my heart.  Had my performance based tendencies worn off on him already?  Did I teach him that he needed people’s approval? Had he learned from me that who he is is wrapped up in what he can do?  

And while I know I need to answer some of these questions, and really pay attention to how I am training my children to think about themselves, I knew the main task at hand was to teach my son how to make things right and ask for forgiveness from his friends at school.  And this was going to be a huge opportunity to train him in the way he should go!

Laura
Anna
Anna

In light of that struggle, what mom win did you experience?

Anna
Laura
Laura

You know, I think the win came from the struggle itself.  It was an amazing learning opportunity for him, and I got to spend a lot of quality time with him.  The next day we sat down and drafted a note that he was going to write to all of the students he stole from.  He decided what to say. I helped him get it into 4 succinct sentences, but the words were all his. I got to teach him how to write a note… the English teacher in me loved that!  I spent time with him as we figured out which sticks went to each of 9 students. It was a hard task. He realized that he had been doing this for so long that he might not be able to return things to their rightful owners because he couldn’t remember.  

We talked about what it means to have integrity.  We talked about what it means to need forgiveness and where it actually comes from.  We talked about how his friends might be a little mad at him, and that they might not trust him for a little while.  He had to ask his teacher to help him return the property. She even had him read the notes aloud to his friends. He really had to face this!  And he had to do a lot of this on his own. I prayed for him through each step of the process, but he did the work.

I really count this whole experience a win because I was able to separate my own identity from his, but he was really able to establish his own identity too.  I hope with everything in me that he will not walk down this road again (and we have established clear consequences if he chooses to do this again), but I really think he has learned from this.  And isn’t that the best kind of win? Plus I have opportunity now to talk to him all the time about who he is. That we love him no matter what. That he doesn’t need spirit sticks to be worthy of our approval or love.

Laura
Anna
Anna

That is the best kind of win and hopefully lots of “wins” to come in the future. Any words of encouragement for other moms in the trenches like you?

Anna
Laura
Laura

You know, I am no expert at this whole motherhood thing.  I’m fumbling through all of it just like most us! I think I handled this situation pretty well. (And while I talked to my husband about all of this, and he was supportive of every step, and he had his own conversation with our son about this, I handled most of this process.)  I don’t have any magical advice for other moms. I think sometimes we get it right. But I give all the credit to the Holy Spirit. I honestly think I was used by God to teach my son this lesson. And so my encouragement is this, let God use you. Try not to get in the way with your stuff (cause we all have stuff).  God made you your child’s mom for the struggles he’ll experience and for all the good stuff too! Remember who you are. Remember whose you are and that your child is His too. Remember how awesome He is. You’ve got this mom thing even when, maybe especially when, you don’t because of His strength in you! #bemomstrong!

 

Laura

 

 

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We don’t claim to have motherhood figured out. Actually quite the opposite. We’re a group of women who first and foremost love the Lord and want to honor Him with our lives and talents. And we decided that what better way for us to sort out this beautiful and messy thing called motherhood but to process it together in text messages? Our prayer is that as we share our real-life stories and honest experiences, every mom who visits our blog will receive tangible truth and experience real grace.

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