A nice day being a Stay-at-Home mom

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A couple months ago, I got some really traumatic news that my high school’s time capsule was being dug up about 20 years prematurely because they are in the process of re-building the school.  In the time capsule a couple hundred students in my class (including me!) had written letters to ourselves in the future and I remember that future seeming a LONG way away back then.  I don’t remember what I wrote in my letter but I do remember what I was like at 17.  My 17-year-old self would not be pleased with me being a stay at home mom.  My 17-year old self would have cared about leaning in and maybe even this post-nup thing I read about thanks to Verity Credit Union’s Twitter feed. And my 17-year-old self would definitely wonder what happened to me, that I’m permanently at home with my kids, when sometimes they’re not even home because they’re at school.

Thankfully that horrid thing is getting buried again.  I know my 50-year-old self will be a lot more wise and capable of dealing with me as a teenager than me right now.

It’s funny how sometimes life chooses its way for you.  And I know with my guys going to kindergarten next year, I’m definitely going to have to make some decisions about what my next chapter will be whether I’m ready for it or not.  I’ve also been reflecting quite a bit on what we’ve accomplished over the years I’ve been at home.  There are many things I’m truly thankful for but there are sometimes when I wonder if I have made any difference, and maybe if all of this has been for nothing.  (This usually happens when there is some kind of bloody accident and all of us are in the midst of a tantrum and we are at Target.)

Sometimes I miss my old work.  My coworkers.  My students. MY life.

And then I get days like today, where we stay in our pajamas a little too long.

We make cards.

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And I see where they learn a little from me; when we do art together, it’s funny that they copy what I do, and then I change things in my own projects based on input from them.  It’s neat how collaborative we are when we are together.

And because it was a calm morning, I had a little time to make some after school treats and had a little time to myself while they were at school. I even took a class (I love the classes Alt Summit puts on!) and went for a run.

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And sometime in the course of the day, one of the guys said something that gave me a glimmer of hope that my life at home has meant something.

“Mom-I love your job.”

My job?  What’s my job???

“Staying home with us.”

Cue waterworks on my end.

So today is a good day and today it’s like I got the biggest job-we’ll-done award I could receive in my current place of employment.  And today, that’s good enough for me.

I hope you have a lovely weekend too!

(PS.. Did I mention it was sunny in Seattle today too?!!!!!)

(PPS. Dear 17-year-old self, being a stay-at-home mom is definitely NOT as easy as you probably thought it would be.  See you in 20 years!)

 

7 thoughts on “A nice day being a Stay-at-Home mom

  1. Amen to everything you said! We soaked up the sun at Kelsey Creek Farm today (thank you for the recommendation!) and had a ball. Today was a great day.

    1. So glad you made it to the farm:) yesterday would have been so lovely there! Have a great weekend!

  2. I agree with everything in this post. My 17 year old self would probably be lecturing me about how I spent so many years and a ton of money for university to stay at home after I had kids.

    There are some days like you that I go back and forth wondering if what I am doing is making a difference. Should I be like everyone else from my university class and try to climb up the corporate ladder? Is finding a new career path a lost cause?

    Both my kids will be in full time school starting this September and I’m not sure what I will be doing. I don’t really have a plan just yet. Partly because I still haven’t wrapped my head around the fact that this is it. No more babies to keep me at home.

    I’ve asked my daughter the same question about what it is she wants to be when she grows up. Her answer “I want to be a mommy like you. You know, work from home a little bit, and play and read stories to my babies. I want to have fun with my family. And take lots of pictures.” It’s times like those that I don’t regret putting my career on hold for 5+ years and makes me appreciate all the great stuff I’ve achieved outside of the working world.

    HA! I liked the PPS comment at the end of the post. This stay at home stuff is definitely not what I had imagined it to be either when I was a teenager

    1. Cheryl, it sounds like we’ll be in the same situation come September:) and I’m excited to hear how it goes:)

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