Authenticity - by gabriella
Several years
ago, I was in a season of life as a new parent and was a stay-at-home mom with
4 small children ages 6, 4,2 and 1. It was a crazy time and one full of
adventure. I am an extrovert, someone who loves to engage in conversation and life
with other people. I come from a big family; 5 children and 2 parents who were
always together. That home environment is what I’m used to - the air I breathe
- noisy, boisterous, and fun-loving. During my years as a stay-at-home mom, I
really missed adult interaction. I needed the company of women to live life
with, to grow and develop with and I just wasn’t getting enough of that. There
were some things that held me back though, life with 4 kids is fun - and
chaotic, messy and sticky. Every day, my house looked like a bomb had went off.
How could I invite someone into that mess, a mess that revealed the limits of
my parenting and revealed how little control I had over my house and kids? One
day it kind of struck me; for many years I lived under the idea, the illusion,
and I think many of us do, that my life needed to appear perfect for me to be
accepted in the world – perhaps that wasn’t true at all.
I grew up with a
traditional conservative upbringing. My family immigrated to Canada in 1978 from the
Netherlands and peripherally became a part of a rather traditional Christian
Reformed Community. Our faith and cultural community had clear and rigid gender
roles for men and women (and boys and girls) and cultural norms about
relationships and how people are to have relationships with each other. My mom, thankfully, didn’t adhere as tightly
to these cultural norms as others did. When the Dutch standard of cleanliness is
spoken or joked about – how tidy they are, the rigid cleaning schedule, or how fastidiously
clean the whole house is, that’s not my story, that’s not my mother and so
that’s not what she passed on to me. And I’m grateful for that.
However, there
is a sense in the Dutch immigrant culture, and society in general, that women
are to keep an impossibly clean house and present as though everything in life
is perfect. Although my mother didn’t pass on these values to me, I learned quickly
the expectation of what it was to be a good woman. And so went into womanhood
with this sense that I needed have a clean, tidy house, with beautiful things,
be the perfect wife, mother, dinner on the table at 5:30pm, etc. - you know the exhausting list. And to be
honest, having 4 children under your feet is not a time to work towards perfection.
I’m a high achiever though and quite motivated, so while perfection was
unattainable, I could certainly try.
During those
stay at home years, I came to a realization, a different sense of prioritizing
my life. I knew that I wanted relationship in my life and knew that seeking relationship
started with me. And so, I jumped in. I started to take those first few unsure
steps and invited people into my mess and chaos and real life. What I found
when I started were words of encouragement; statements about bravery and
courage and, curiously, women admitting to me that they struggled with the same
thing! At the beginning, friends and their kids would come to the door, and
within the first minute, I would apologize for the state of my house and make
excuses for why it wasn’t perfect. Over time, I started to realize that my
apologies weren’t authentic and actually made my friends feel unwelcome rather
than welcome. So I stopped apologizing. I stopped living in that place of fear
of judgment, what people would think about my house, my life, my parenting, my
womanhood, my ability to clean, whatever it was. I let that go and make a decision
that if people wanted to judge, they could. Judgement was really a matter of
their heart, not mine. And, you know, it sounds like something so small, but
that life lesson was one of the pieces of my journey to authenticity.
The metaphor of
the perfection of my house also applies to the rest of my life - how freeing.
One of other catalysts of my change of perspective is that at the same time, I
was also digging deeper into my relationship with God and finding a real sense
of identity in Him. I worked through Rick Warren’s, “A Purpose-Driven Life” and
found deep resonance in Warren’s writing. I took my study through it very
seriously, spending dedicated and devoted time with it every day. Naturally over time, that transferred into
dedicated and devoted time with God. In the Bible, I heard again the story of
God’s unconditional love and grace - the story of belonging and being enough to
God.
Fast-forward to
my life now, with children 14, 13, 11, and 9, a career, husband and a life that
moves at a quicker pace. What that life lesson, learned so long ago, has brought me to is a really
clear sense of who I am in God and therefore who I am to other people. There
are moments when this sense is a big foggy, but for the most part, I live with a
deep assurance of God’s love for me that overflows in how I live. I’m no longer
interested in other’s judgment of how I’m doing things or how I live. Instead, what
I value in my life are those relationships that are authentic and meaningful
with folks who are interested in getting past the superficial pressures of this
life and sharing the journey together.
So I have been trying to figure out how to publish my comments - I am using Gabriella's as a test - I apologize for the boring post if this works! Anna
ReplyDeleteI want to thank you for the reminder that it is not having the dishes done or the house vacuumed that is important. I too come from a Dutch Calvinistic background and I have been taught since a young age to work first and play later - except that there was very little play because Idle hands were not good - so more work was easily found. Thank you for the reminder that it is relationships with my children, family, friends and my Saviour that is more important. Some days you just have to play and forget about the laundry.
ReplyDeleteI want to thank you for the reminder that it is not having the dishes done or the house vacuumed that is important. I too come from a Dutch Calvinistic background and I have been taught since a young age to work first and play later - except that there was very little play because Idle hands were not good - so more work was easily found. Thank you for the reminder that it is relationships with my children, family, friends and my Saviour that is more important. Some days you just have to play and forget about the laundry.
ReplyDeleteSorry for the doubled comment.
DeleteSo much to learn from each other. Thank you.
ReplyDelete