• the one about Mary

    Seven years ago, I was pregnant with Noelle. Well, I was pregnant with a child who would be named Noelle — but at the time, we did not know if she was a boy or a girl. We opted to be surprised at birth with the sex of our first baby. 
    First baby. To this day, I struggle to say that. She wasn’t our first. She was our second. I lost our first to miscarriage, and it changed every part of who I was — and made me who I am. 
    Broken and tired. Anxious and weary. But then, I was made new.
    Pregnant with the child who would become Noelle, we truly did not care whether we had a boy or a girl, so long as we were able to actually hold this baby in our arms. But I always had a feeling that we were having a girl. 
    Maybe it was a feeling — or maybe it was a preference. If I am being honest, I wanted a girl so badly. I wanted the dresses. I wanted the bows. I wanted the twirling and dancing and dolls and pink. I didn’t understand how to be a boy mom. I didn’t think I would be a good one. 
    When she was born, and I saw her face, I knew. I knew she was a girl before they even told me. In my hospital bag, I had tucked away a Target sack, and inside was a pink bow and pink shoes with pink elephants on them. Somehow I knew…or I was willing it to be.
    We would go on to have two more baby girls over the next few years. No more surprises — we learned at our ultrasounds who was growing inside. The babies were called by their names, their rooms were prepared in pink, and their pink accessories were not-so-secretly stuffed inside my hospital bag. 
    Three girls. I got my dresses. I got my bows. I got my twirling and dancing and dolls and pink. 
    Thank you, God.
    And then we decided we were ready for another baby. And by way of another miscarriage, we learned our plan was not to be. 
    However, not too long after — another pregnancy. Another chance to give life. 
    And this time, a boy.
    Leo.
    Mid-20’s Ashley, first-time mom Ashley, she was afraid of having a boy because the outfits weren’t as cute. 
    But early 30’s Ashley, fourth-time mom Ashley, with two miscarriages and many miles between them, she was elated…ecstatic…relieved to be having a boy. 
    Thank you, God.
    Since his birth, I have noticed an undeniable connection between him and I. Luke will say, “I have never seen a boy love his mama as much as Leo loves you.” Of course, I am his provider. I feed him. I give him what he needs to survive. But there’s something else there. 
    I love my daughters so much. They bring me such joy, and there’s nothing I wouldn’t do for them. I look forward to growing into friendship with them as they get older, and more than anything, I am thrilled that they have each other as sisters. 
    But there seems to be this thing between mamas and their boys. This bond. This connection. It’s there without having to do anything else. 
    And I think it has something to do with Mary. 
    The most beautiful mother and son relationship since the very beginning. I can’t help but feel connected to her in this deep, natural way. In fact, regardless of how joyful or exciting the Christmas season is, I have felt a longing… an impatience… these past couple of weeks. Probably much like Mary long ago.
    Can you even imagine? Very pregnant with this incredibly special baby boy, traveling this long journey to Bethlehem by way of foot (or donkey if you’re lucky), only to be told there’s no room for you to stay in a clean, warm room with a bed — but you can sleep with the animals. I mean, I nearly cried when I thought I was going to have to share a recovery room in the hospital with another patient.
    And there, among the animals, you give birth to your son. To the Son.
    It wasn’t her plan to have this baby. She didn’t understand how she was chosen or why. But she did it.
    Broken and tired. Anxious and weary. But then, she was made new.
    It has been over six months since Leo was born. 

    He has fulfilled me in ways that I never knew were possible. 

    He has a contagious smile, now with two little teeth. 

    When he looks at you, he looks into your soul — seeing all the good and the bad… and loving you anyway. 

    He is such a light, as all children are. 

    He commands your attention and lets you know when he wants more.


    He keeps us up at night sometimes (a lot of times).  Adding a fourth child has made our van tight on space and doesn’t allow for many childless outings or events, but he is not a burden. 

    It is not work. It is love. 


    Broken and tired. Anxious and weary. But then, I was made new.
  • the one about enough

    Luke and I were watching some old videos of the girls before bed one night. It is one of our favorite things to do. We like to snuggle up, pull out a laptop, iPad, or phone, and we like to reach back as far as our device will go and find the oldest, cutest, sweetest videos of our kids from their younger days.

    Even though our children are relatively young at 7, 5, 3, and 6 months, we still yearn for those times when they were even smaller. We ache for those times and cherish these videos.

    Luke found one that we hadn’t watched in a little while. Some of them, I know by heart. I can remember what the date was or why we were taking the video…I can even remember what I say or what the kids say…like the script of a favorite movie you just want to keep quoting (and annoying your friends as a result). This one, however, I had forgotten about.

    The girls were being cute. Little Noelle, toddler Charlotte, and baby Shiloh. Luke was speaking to them in a soft voice, asking them questions and capturing their adorable responses. Where was I? What was I doing?

    I was storming around the house, griping about shoes not being put away and how I have to clean up everything. You hear it all on the video. You can’t see me at all, but you know, you know, I was there. I wasn’t interacting with my girls. I most likely took the opportunity to do anything but be on camera so as not to preserve the extra baby weight I was wearing or the stress acne that had erupted on my face. Never thin enough, never pretty enough, never perfect enough to be preserved forever in a video.

    At first, we laughed. It was kind of funny hearing me go on this mini-tyrade in the background. And then, I became sad. This. This is what my children will have of me when I am gone. A video of just my voice, bitching about some shoes that needed put into a basket.

    This sparked something inside of me that said, “Enough.”

    Actually, it screamed, “ENOUGH!”

    Enough.

    I have always placed a tremendous amount of pressure on myself to make sure that my house is put together, cleaned up, and organized. However, these desires strengthened ten-fold during my most recent pregnancy. Call it “nesting,” but I almost think I developed a weird OCD-meets-manic-meets-neurotic mindset where if the house was dirty, if things were out of place, I would feel physical illness. My head would pound. My stomach would knot itself. My neck would ache. It was a feeling like nothing I had ever felt before. I couldn’t sleep if dishes were in the sink. I couldn’t walk by a spot on the floor without getting a rag to clean it up. I couldn’t deal with toys left out, books on the couch, or laundry piles on the floor.

    And when I say I couldn’t deal, I mean that I would express my frustration in crying, yelling, and really just throwing a big ass fit.

    While those feelings have lessened over the past 6 months since having Leo, I do still feel that pressure. I worry that we will have unexpected visitors who will see our mess, and then they will think less of me as a mother, wife, “housekeeper.” I worry that my children will tell their friends that our house is a mess. I fear that if everything isn’t “just so,” people may get the impression that I am not OK, that I am not handling motherhood well, or that I am in over my head.

    Luke has never placed this pressure on me. It is all self-imposed. But where did it come from? Honestly, in college, I was a slob. It was a well-known fact. My roommates would laugh at the fact that I would barely have a clear patch of floor in my room. Sometimes, I would stand at my doorway and take a flying leap over piles of clothes, magazines, and shoes, just to make it to the bed. It was the ultimate game of Hot Lava.

    I don’t remember feeling stressed or anxious about the mess then. I don’t know what switched inside of me, except that maybe it is an undying, unending, never-satisfied desire for control.

    In many ways, my life is very chaotic. I have four children that are ages 7 and under. My husband works a lot of hours at times, and we are building a house that has taken up 80% of his free time. Between transporting my children to and from school and activities, volunteering both at the school and in my community, working on my own businesses that I run, and keeping up with the general tasks of life, there is nearly zero time for self-care or self-control.

    Cleaning my house and forcing my children to comply is one way that I can exert control. But it is not healthy. It is not right. And it will stop, today.

    Everyone agrees that a clean home is desirable because it is about taking care of what we have. It is about treating our possessions with care. It is about having pride in ourselves and our home. I would never want to “let it go” to the point of embarrassment or filth, but is there enough wiggle room to allow a toy to stay on a rug overnight or a sock to get put in the laundry basket the next day or a shoe to take its time finding its way to the bin?

    Hell yes there is.

    I will not let something that takes 30 minutes to clean up ruin the chance for me to be an interactive, present parent.

    When my husband graduated from residency, he made a speech in front of his peers, supervisors, and future colleagues. This is customary for all residents to do. He stood up there in front of everyone and said that his “wife was the Pinterest queen. I walk around the house and wonder, ‘How does she do it all?'” While that earned several smiles and sweet giggles from the audience, I immediately felt like a fraud. I thought, “He sees me as the Pinterest queen…the one who ‘does it all,’ yet I feel less like a queen and more like a horrible, evil wench who pretends to have her shit together, when really she does not. Even my husband can’t see it.”

    I do get asked a lot, “How do you DO it? How do you take care of your kids and get involved with so much and keep up your house and brush your teeth?” I hear, “You are Super Mom” or “Wonder Woman!” I do not say this to brag about myself — in fact I get very embarrassed just like I did in the story above. It highlights to me that I am doing a terrible job of keeping it very real. We are all guilty of posting and sharing the shiny, glittery moments on social media and leaving out the ones we wish to hide or forget. We all know how to crop a photo the right way or find the best lighting or pick the most flattering filter. I am no different. I am no Super Mom or Wonder Woman. I am a human who struggles, just like everyone else.

    As part of this cathartic post, I wanted to share photos of our everyday, real life, right now. These are less for you and more for me. I need to be OK with sharing my imperfections, my flaws, my real self. This is the only way that I will eventually learn to accept myself for who I am, and hopefully find myself IN the videos with my kids and not just complaining in the background.

    Join me as I thank God for every messy, out of place flaw in these photos.

    I am thankful for this unicorn backpack, this pink sippy cup, and this outer space coat, because it means I have a healthy, happy, adorable little three year old who enjoyed her morning at preschool. 
    There will always be no less than 4 bags in my van at all times, and that is OK because those bags hold books for my Bible study, notes for the committees I volunteer for, and diapers for my precious babies. And yes, there’s another coat — how blessed we are that our children have coats to wear and keep them warm.
    I am thankful for baby dolls in the back seat and that sweet, purple drawing of “mama” with 28 arms. And that car seat is way overdue for a cleaning, but it keeps my girl safe, and that is all that matters right now.

    I thankful for my iPad and my Kitchenaid mixer — modern luxuries that add a lot to my life. I can’t go anywhere without my Yeti cup, and that list of paper is where I was jotting down all the Christmas gifts we have purchased for family and friends thus far. Signs of a teething baby and a newfound sunglasses obsession. Blessings on (cluttered) blessings. 

    I have been working on this pile of laundry for 3 days now. This is all clean…but needs folded and put away. I will no sooner get it put away and have four more loads to start over on. What a problem to have…. more clothes than we know what to do with. Tiny socks and underwear belonging to tiny humans. Thank you for my tiny humans.

    Cereal bowls from this morning’s breakfast. Kids learning to take their bowls to the sink. Evidence of plenty of food in our house and full bellies before a good day at school and work.
    The messy floor of a bedroom shared by three sisters. Wrapping paper scraps because their favorite thing to play is “Christmas.” Toys that will be wrapped up, unwrapped, and wrapped up again. Blankets that cuddled them through the night. 

    Maybe these photos make you think less of me. Maybe they gross you out. That’s alright if they do. Just don’t come over unannounced, OK?
    But if these photos help you to see that you are not alone. That other houses are messy…that other lives are even messier…I welcome you to come on over, anytime. Throw the laundry on the floor and make yourself at home.