Andy is finally home after being gone almost all of the past 2 months!!!!
I can’t even tell you how happy we are, I am, to have him home. The kids have missed their daddy and I have missed my best friend.
I didn’t even realize how lonely I was until I had him home again. To talk to, listen to, laugh with, show funny internet memes to, hold hands with, cuddle with, even to cook for!
The past couple of months have been very challenging, but also incredibly eye-opening. Here are some lessons I’ve learned…I don’t want to forget these things:
I’m not as strong as I’d like to think I am. Sure, I can handle everything and manage to get by, but I didn’t survive these months without some very humbling low points. I need my husband. I need other people’s help, support, and encouragement in my life. I need God so.much.more than I realize.
Doing everything by myself these past months has proved to me that I can do everything by myself. Stick with me on this for a minute… I learned that it’s physically possible. Not that I should do it alone, but I can. I think I was subconsciously always trying to prove that to myself and to Andy. I think it’s why I resisted his help and why I always felt guilty when he would do anything with the kids or around the house. I know I’m a little crazy, but somehow now that I’ve “proven” this to us both, I don’t feel pressure to have to be so independent and stubborn anymore! I treasure his help now, and I’ve learned how much I need it and how important it is that I get away from my “job” from time to time. Being a mom who is on duty 100% of the time handling everything alone and never getting away from her job isn’t virtuous. It’s a recipe for disaster.
God will raise up people around me even if they’re not the ones I expected. I spent too much time being hurt that I didn’t hear from certain family members during this trying time, and that caused me to be temporarily blind to the lovely people that DID step in to care for me. The texts from friends asking how I was holding up were priceless. I didn’t need anyone to come over to do chores, but knowing someone was thinking of me was such an encouragement to my heart. A dear mentor had yummy treats delivered to the house. A kind neighbor stopped over during the evening ‘witching hour’ to bring little things for the kids or feed Drew so I could eat dinner or just chat since I hadn’t had an adult conversation all day. A sweet woman from church told me week after week to pick a morning for her to come over for a couple of hours so I could leave the house alone. A friend convinced me to come over in my pajamas with all the kids to hang out on a rainy day and her continuous generosity has inspired me to be a better woman. These were women I didn’t expect to be the ones to support me, but whose tangible love touched me so deeply.
I have to be ok with letting certain things go. It’s OK to tell the kids they have to go play on their own so that I can do something that fills me up or even just have some quiet time. I don’t have to make a big dinner every night, we can eat simple and fast things that are healthy, but uncomplicated. Dishes can wait until the next morning. School can take place in the afternoon. People can come over when the house is a mess. I can push and push and push to make everything happen the way I think it should, or I can let go and breathe deep knowing that I’m perfectly loved despite all those things.
Facetime sucks. I’ve said it before, but Facetime is one of my least favorite things ever!! The kids can be totally fine and the minute a Facetime call initiates they turn into little monsters. Hogging the screen, pushing and shoving, gathering up 101 items to “show dad” up close in the camera. Drew grabs at the screen, threatening to end the call. Grace thinks she’s the only person in the universe. Avery runs away and won’t come back. It’s always too dark on my end and I can never get all of our faces on the screen, AND I forever have an odd scowl and 4 chins. No thank you. There’s nothing like REAL face time and I’m so glad Andy is home so we get a break from that special form of technological torture!
Prayer is powerful. I mentioned that I had some very humbling low points while Andy was gone and those usually involved me losing my temper with the kids. I would try so hard to be patient and kind and gentle and they would keep pushing and whining and arguing and I would just lose it and start yelling. I don’t think of myself as an angry person, but this crazy rage would bubble up inside me and spill out in these intense moments. I came from a home where yelling wasn’t uncommon and I decided I did not want that to be the kind of home my children grew up in. I’m all about authentically expressing hurt, anger, disappointment and sadness, but I do not think it has to happen in the form of yelling and screaming. It’s scary and unnecessary. No amount of self-control seems to be enough in the moments you’re on the brink, but there is something that helps…prayer. I didn’t cry out to God fast enough in some of my rough moments, but there was always an opportunity to gather my babies into my arms and pray aloud to God for forgiveness, mercy and grace. This practice would supernaturally change the emotional thermostat in our home. In fact, it was so powerful that Grace began praying aloud for us all when things even started to get tense. Her little child heart saw God’s goodness and it strengthened her faith and now, even through tears, she asks for prayer or just prays on her own, when things get hard. I cannot even tell you how happy this makes me. I pray she continues to believe God so earnestly.
My husband is absolutely positively top-notch. You know the saying, “You don’t know what you’ve got till it’s gone”? Well, I experienced that first hand. I have certainly been grateful for Andy throughout our marriage…he’s a great guy, and I’ve always known that. I’ve been particularly thankful for him the past few years for sticking with me despite my many failures. Somehow I don’t think I quite understood just how incredible he is until this stretch of time away from him. It’s been a combination of having him gone, seeing and hearing about circumstances around me, and I’m sure the Holy Spirit’s work in my heart, but man alive I see what an absolute gem he is and I’m humbled that he is mine. I think it becomes easy to take for granted what we have…to get into relational ruts…to become petty and ungrateful…to focus on things we wish were different. I was sliding down that slope this summer in some ways. With so many changes happening in our life, I think we’ve both experienced some inner turmoil, and that never really brings out the best in how we relate to each other. The time away was a really good reset and I don’t want to lose sight of the serious blessing that he is in my life! I love you, babe.
Lynette Gerbe says
“The more things change the more they stay the same”…the first time I heard that, I wondered, “What the heck does that mean?” Of course, I got my answer but your blog today brought it all back….I was in you place more than 30 years ago and my kids were 12, 8, 7 and 6 years old…I was a single mom and my kids had a deadbeat dad but they never heard that from me. There were times that I wondered why God would let this happen to me..4 boys to raise on my own in every way..But I did have great resources in my family and they were close by so that helped but looking back now, I can see just what you described in your blog being my life and having to be everything to everybody until I thought I might burst into flames! Then my mom or my sister would show up like that neighbor of yours and they would say, here is $20 go get your hair done or go sit in the library and read, I have the kids now…and that is when I would thank God for blessing me with such a family. So, that is what it means….over the generations, Things change and then again those things really do stay the same, so that each generation can learn from them. Mine are grown and on their own and they have had their ups and downs and it is their turn to learn…God bless you and your little family…you will do fine just like I did.
Rebecca says
Lynette, Thank you so much for your encouraging comment!! I so appreciate hearing from other mom’s who are farther down the path than I am. You deserve a medal for raising 4 boys on your own!! Oh my goodness! I laughed out loud when you talked about being everything to everybody making you think you’d burst into flames! I know that feeling!! God is so good and encouragement from sisters in the faith is a lovely display of his goodness. Thank you!
Jennifer says
“Being a mom who is on duty 100% of the time handling everything alone and never getting away from her job isn’t virtuous. It’s a recipe for disaster.” – We need to put this on posters and hand them out in the delivery room!
I’m glad Andy’s home. I say it all the time but I really don’t know how single parents do it. Tim was gone for a month in the middle of a snowy winter last year and I almost went crazy…at least I knew there was an end date to all of that craziness. Single parents never have that relief.
And yes, Facetime is the worst with kids! We use it all the time to let the kids talk with the grandparents and I’d rather use a carrier pigeon.
Val says
Yeah Andy is back!! Reuniting almost makes it ok ;) Hesring your honest take-away caused me to pause and think of our (to many to count) deployments and how/what I have learned through them. I appreciate the perspective which has caused a reflective moment for me.. Which of course you know I love! Jeff is currently deployed and this time feels particularly lonely :( I think you said it best when you said “you’ve missed your best friend.” I GET THAT!! Soak up ever moment, enjoy letting dad do bedtime so mom can relax with a cup of tea!!
Rochelle says
You have been super busy learning!!!!…I am so glad Andy is home!!!!!!
Aunt Becky says
And our God works all things to good to those who are called according to His purpose! I love your honestly Rebecca. It speaks so highly to the person God is creating in you. So happy that Andy is home.