Flo shares a practical way that she balances all her mom tasks.
What I
Can Do Well
If you are a mom
with all young children, you know how overwhelming all the
responsibilities resting on you can feel.
Chief
cook and pastry chef
Nurse,
pharmacist, and medical adviser
Flowerbed
and garden planter, water and fertilizer supervisor
Birthday
rememberer (my friends, and all the children’s friends)
Executive
housekeeping officer
Mail
and bookkeeping master
The above items list
only physical obligations, not even touching the abstract
responsibilities that come with the role of wife and mom: teacher,
nurturer, friend, neighbor, and more. How can I meet the demands
required for this life I’m blessed to live?
I run from
defrosting the freezer—frost up to here!—to creating a bank
deposit to emptying my son’s too-full clothes drawer, berating
myself for not taking the outgrown clothes to the attic two months
ago. Taking clothes to the attic makes me cross, because I see all
the coats, clothes, and camping gear swirled together. Should I
tackle the mess in the attic for a few minutes since I’m up here
anyway? Or ignore the wreck and continue deep cleaning the boys’
room?
I hate working as
hard as possible and still feeling perpetually behind. Attempting
varied tasks in as many directions leaves me feeling scattered and
exhausted, not to mention inefficient and unproductive.
I’m not a good mom
when I feel too busy to enjoy the children. And this is the life I
dreamed of: taking care of little people and raising them with the
man I love. If I don’t enjoy the moment now, when will I? Certainly
not when the children are grown and gone, no longer requesting to be
read The Tale of Peter Rabbit.
And then I found
this advice, words that gave me permission to say no to necessary
work without guilt: Of all the work you are responsible for, do
well at one thing today.
One thing? One feels far easier than
everything. One allows me to say no to many things and focus on what
is most important today. This is how I have narrowed my everyday
household responsibilities to 4 items:
- Cooking and baking
- General cleaning and laundry
- Deep cleaning and organizing
- Office work—anything at my desk
I can choose to work
on one thing and not stress about the myriad other tasks waiting.
When I return books to the bookshelves in the office and see the mail
on my desk needing to be processed, I don’t need to drop everything
and clean off my desk. Deskwork waits for Tuesday, which I try keep
free of errands and appointments so I can give my full attention to
mail and writing projects and books.
Deep cleaning is not
assigned to a particular day of the week, but tackled on a specific
day of my choice. When I am deep cleaning the living room, supper
will likely be a simple chicken and rice casserole; it’s not the
day for a four-course meal. Laundry and cleaning are most likely to
get done Monday and Friday. Saturday I like to prepare food for
Sunday, choosing kitchen work above any other responsibilities.
Two things I chose
not to put on my responsibilities list are “wife” and “mom.”
Regardless of what other responsibilities I fill, I want to give my
husband and children priority every day—it’s the ultimate
accomplishment if I may do it well.
-Florence Fox - Michigan
Thanks for sharing this encouraging post...just what I needed for this busy stage of life.
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