This Stage of Life-_opt

This stage of life. It’s hard, you guys.

I’m talking right now to you moms who are in your early to mid 30’s. You have kids. Likely two, three, maybe four of them. They probably range in age from newborns to  7 or 8 year-olds. (Give or take a few, on all of the above mentioned stats).

In this stage of life, you are dealing with exhaustion. Mental, physical, and emotional.

In this stage of life, you are dealing with teething. With ear infections. With stomach viruses. You are juggling nap schedules, and feeding schedules and soccer schedules. A million balls you are juggling, and you probably feel like you are dropping most of them.

In this stage of life, you are dealing with guilt. Guilt over having a career, and not spending enough time with your kids, or guilt over staying home with your kids, and not doing enough to contribute financially. Guilt over being too harsh with your kids. Too lenient. Guilt that your house is clean, but your kids were ignored, or guilt that you enjoyed your children all day, and now your husband is coming home to filth. Guilt.

In this stage of life, you are bombarded daily with a whole host of decisions. Some of them life-changing, some of them not. None of them with clear cut answers. Do I vaccinate my kids? Do I not? Do I send them to public school? Homeschool? Charter school? Do I continue to breastfeed? Do I blow the budget so that I can buy all organic? Do I force my child to apologize, even though the apology will be insincere? You don’t know the answers to ANYTHING, but you feel constant pressure to figure out EVERYTHING.

This stage of life is less and less about watching your friends get married and have babies, and more and more about standing by and witnessing your friends struggle in their marriage, and even get divorced. It’s a stage where you’ve got to put in the time and the effort and the work and the energy to make sure your OWN marriage stays healthy. And that’s good, but it’s hard, too.   At this point, you or someone you know has experienced infertility. Miscarriages. Loss of a child.

It’s a stage where you are buying houses, selling houses, remodeling houses, packing up houses. And then you do it all again a few years later.

It’s a stage where your hormones are all of of whack. I mean, you’ve basically been pregnant, postpartum, or breastfeeding for the last ten years, right?

It’s a stage where you are struggling with identity. Is my entire identity “mommy”? Is there anything even left of me that isn’t about mothering? Is there something more glamorous I could have/should have done with my life? I LOOK like a mom now, don’t I? I totally do.

It’s a stage where you are on a constant quest for balance, and can never find it.

It’s a stage of life where you are overloaded. Constantly. You are overloaded with questions. Your children never stop asking them. You are overloaded with touch. Someone is constantly wanting to be held, holding on to you, hanging on you, touching you. You are overloaded with to-do’s. There is so much to do. It never ends. You are overloaded with worry. You are overloaded with THINGS. Your kids have way too many toys. You are overloaded with activities. You are overloaded with THOUGHTS (thoughts about how to not be so overloaded, perhaps?).

It’s hard.

So….what do you need to do to survive it all?

You need to ask for help.

You need to accept help when it’s given.

You need to not neglect your marriage. You need to put your kids down for bed early. Sit outside on the back porch with your husband, drink a glass of wine, and have a conversation.

You need girlfriends.

You need your mom.

You need older friends, who have been there and done that. Who can reassure you that you AREN’T screwing it all up as badly as you think you are.

You need to not feel bad about using your kids nap time every now and again to just do whatever the heck you want.

You need to lower your expectations….then probably lower them again.

You need to simplify.  Simplify every single part of your life, as much as it can be simplified.

You need to learn how to say “no”.

You need to practice contentment

You need to be ok leaving your kids overnight, and going away somewhere. Anywhere.

You need to do something you enjoy, every day, even if it’s for no more than 15 minutes.

You need to pray. Girl, you need to pray.

You need a coffee you love, a wine you love, and a bubble bath that you love.

Finally, and maybe most importantly, you need to remember that…..

….this stage of life is beautiful, too. Like, really really beautiful. This is the stage of life where every single older person you ever meet tells you, “you’re going to miss this”. And you already know it’s true. It’s the stage where your kids love you more than they are EVER going to love you again, for the whole rest of your life. It’s the stage where they can fit their entire selves into your lap to snuggle…and they want to. It’s the stage where their biggest problems ARE ear infections and teething and stomach viruses, and you’re not having to deal yet with things like broken hearts or addiction or bullying. It’s the stage where you are learning to love your spouse in an entirely different….harder…..better…. way. The stage where you are learning together, being stretched together, shedding your selfishness together, and TRULY being made into “one”. It’s the stage where you get to see Christmas, Halloween and the Fourth of July through your kids eyes, and it’s so much more fun and magical than it would be just through your own eyes. It’s the stage where you get to watch your parents be grandparents…and they’re really good at it. It’s the stage of life filled with field trips, class parties, costumes, swim lessons, bubble baths, dance parties, loose teeth, and first steps. And those things are so fun. It’s the stage where you are young enough to have fun, and old enough to have obtained at least SOME wisdom. It’s SUCH a great stage.

But, man it’s hard.

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter

* indicates required


 

 

Hayley Hengst
Hello AM readers! I'm Hayley. Stay-at-home mom to three boys/angels/tyrants (primarily tyrants). Most days, I am very content in that role. Other days, well, you know how it goes. I absolutely love writing for Austin Moms Blog. I also love: books, bubble baths, Mexican food, porch swings, and traveling. I hate: the hustle and bustle of trying to get out the door, on time, with all three of my kids. Seriously, I just kind of give up. You can read more about my crazy crew at www.motherfreaking.com!

590 COMMENTS

  1. thank you so much for writing this. this has helped me so much. you are literally speaking my life on paper. just thank you. i appreciate it.

  2. What a great article! Moms need to read this so they know that there are others out there going through the same things they are. I’m the mother of one of those overworked moms, and this article is dead on what she is living right now. Thank you for writing this, and I’m sorry there are negative comments. This needed to be said.

  3. This is so true…every.single.word! And so reassuring that I’m not the only one that feels this way, that most of us struggle at this stage in life! Thank you to this from the bottom of my heart.

  4. This nails it. I’ve been there and done that, with 3 children, now adults in their 40’s. I was widowed suddenly with 3 who had just turned 16, 19 & 21. Terrible age to lose a dad.
    It would have been so nice to have support like this back in the 70’s, 80’s & early 90’s.
    We didn’t have a place to expound and share and learn. We DEALT with it and did our best.
    I’m really happy that todays parents are so aware of so much …. ‘tho sometimes I feel it has undermined their sense of security in their child-rearing abilities. Mom’s still have it a little harder than dad’s, from what I observe. (no hate mail please)
    I love that Dad’s are expected to be more hands-on and involved than the father’s in the 70’s and 80’s. For many, it’s uncharted territory and I love that they are embracing it. How exciting.
    The main part of child-raising for parents today, as I have gleaned, is for the parents to be a united team, on the same page about the kid-thaing, and respectful of each other. Communicate with each other and don’t be reluctant to share that one needs rest, or needs a positive response from the other. Admire each other and each one’s efforts. When the kids realize this is the team they’re a part of, they will fall into line and really enjoy being a part of THEIR TEAM!

  5. As a dad, of children ages, 4 and 2, who takes equal responsibility for the kids and chores as my wife, this article is SPOT ON.

    You get home, make dinner, plead with the kids to eat it. Keep them from wearing it, throwing it or feeding it all to the dogs. Then while you’re working hard to clean the kitchen they just trashed the livingroom. You almost pray no neighbors or friends stop by unannounced because it will be so embarrassing. Doing one thing right always takes away from another.

    2 aspects the article didn’t touch no though. I noticed the people who’s kids are grown who say “You’ll miss this” don’t exactly know what they are talking about. They’ve totally forgotten this stage already. You bring your toddler over and he’s running around and getting into literally everything. You’re chasing him because the house isn’t kid proofed and those same people look at you like you’re crazy. They think once you stop little boy from getting into one thing that it’s over. It’s never over. Then when you want to pack up and leave the party first because it’s completely un-enjoyable, they look at you like “Why are you leaving???”. I woke up two hours earlier than you, I packed for an hour just to make it here so I can not even engage in one whole conversation, your house isn’t kid proofed and I’m tired. It’s a really frustrating experience

    Second: Dealing with the DINKS(dual income no kids) is really frustrating too. You know, those people you’ve been friends with since your 20’s that decided they’re never having kids? Now that doesn’t make them bad people, and you do get along with them really well, but you have nothing in common anymore. They don’t understand why when they text you at 6:30 on Friday night to go out for drinks that it is already completely out of the question. Or they don’t understand why you don’t want to go to that awesome concert. Because you know you used the baby sitter last Saturday for a wedding(you didn’t even want to be at) and you’ll be lucky to get her again for next weekend to have dinner for your anniversary, so going to the big awesome concert just isn’t worth the risk. Or when they can’t believe you don’t want to stay out later, “We’ve only been to one bar???”. Yeah that’s because my Saturday AND Sunday start just as early as any other day of the week. You know, 6 or 7 something. There are no days off, EVER. In fact, work days are slightly easier. And of course they can’t understand amongst it all, that you love your kids and wouldn’t trade your life for anything.

  6. You kind of lost me by specifying an age that women have children, and that you have multiple kids if you are a mom, and then not experiencing bullying with small children. I had one only (I spent years experiencing miscarriages and have had to deal with judgement over that), some of the friends we had who became moms ended up becoming real horrible b—s who were judgmental horrible people that I had to stop seeing, and my son was bullied from the first day he went to school. Dealing with the school system has not been all sunshine and roses, I had to pull my son out of a class when I discovered his teacher was screaming at him in his face in front of the entire class in the hallway of the school, he was around FIVE. Similarly, dealing with parents of kids at the schools, parents who exclude your kid from friendships and activities, parents who let their kids steal your kids things. Guess our experiences were very different. Here it’s very common for moms to be late 30’s into late 40’s, but in more rural areas, moms do tend to be younger (20s). Maybe moms are more intense and competitive here. I find there is a lot of “who is the better mom?” happening here, competition to get your kids into the right camps, do the right activities, buy organic etc. I am not in the US.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here