Early this morning, with my alarm chiming and the sun still sleeping, it seemed to me that there was nothing within the entire realm of wishes that I would rather be granted more than several extra hours in bed.
I have been parenting for almost twenty years now. (Having teenagers is one thing. But this December I will truly be the mother of a 20 year old!)
Remarkable as it is to consider having raised a child to that age, more remarkable still is the utterly bewildering fact that all. those. years. have not shifted me even slightly out of the trenches of: bathroom fails, buckling car seats, soothing 2:00 a.m. baby tears, food thrown from high chairs, Duplo blocks and Littlest Pets scattered all over the floor, and cooking dinner one-armed with a baby on my hip.
And sometimes, in moments (usually when dinner is needing cleaned up, kids are needing put to bed, homework is still needing helped with, Mike isn't home, and a few tantrums are occurring), I really do think, "I can't possibly go on. It has been too long. And there is no break. The demands are too relentless. And the stakes are too high. The years still ahead too many. And I am too tired."
But luckily, I also often think that nothing, NOTHING could be too much to ask or too much to give in order to live the very life I am living. There is joy. And there is not only growth, but active and certain hope within the fears and the exhaustion and the unknowns. There might be sighs of wistfulness and pricks of envy, but I've searched my soul. If I could go back, if I could start afresh, with all new options on the horizon, a world of possibilities, ... I would choose this path. Again. And even though I may lock myself in the bathroom to have a good cry more than I imagine anyone would guess, there is no hesitation in that certainty.
Or texts like this when she has taken a grumpy Starling outside while I try to make dinner:
"Me and your baby are having the time of our lives!"