Good reminder: Motherhood is Application

15 05 2012

This is an old post by Rachel Jankovic from the Desiring God website, but lately I’ve been feeling very defeated as a Mom – having more outbursts at Littlelam cos she’s acting up like a teenager tho she’s only 5+. Guess this article was a very good reminder to me. May it bless you too:

Motherhood is Application by Rachel Jankovic|August 25, 2011

If I had to pick one word to describe motherhood, I think that word would be “transforming.”

The days of a busy mother are made up of millions of transformations. Dirty children become clean, the hungry child fed, the tired child sleeping. Almost every task a mother performs in the course of a normal day could be considered a transformation. Disorder to order, dirty clothes to clean, unhappy children to peaceful, empty fridge to full. Every day we fight against disorder, filth, starvation, and lawlessness, and some days we might almost succeed. And then, while we sleep, everything unravels and we start again in the morning — transforming.

Days of these little cycles add up and suddenly you see a big transformation. A nursing infant has become a boy on a bicycle, a baby bump has grown into a toddler, and children have been changed into brothers and sisters.

Then there is the kind of transformations that we do — not because we work at it, but because we were created to do it. You eat your lunch, and your body transforms it into nourishment for a baby. Taking something too big for an infant, and still finding a way to feed them with it — with the goal of growing them up to do it themselves.

Pregnancy and nursing are only a small part of a child’s life though — and this cycle is clearly not only a physical one. It is the spiritual cycle of food that is so much more important, and so much less talked about. Christian mothering is a constant cycle of nourishment — both physical and spiritual.

We Apply What We Believe

In the same way we take the food we eat and make it into something the baby can eat   (and our bodies simply do this without us willing them to), so we take what we believe about God and the gospel and faith and life, and we apply it in the places that seem too little for it.

Imagine yourself in your kitchen trying to make dinner for a group of little kids who are tired and should have eaten a half hour ago. Imagine that things are going wrong beyond that — maybe you are out of something you assumed you had, children are fussing with one another, and maybe your littlest is still at the age where they come stand on your feet and pull on your pant leg. Bonus points if you are wearing maternity pants and this little person is actually capable of pulling your pants down. You are hot, you are tired, and you are sick of it.

This is no time for a gospel presentation. There isn’t time. There isn’t anyone to lead the discussion around the felt board, because you are still scrambling to figure out dinner. This isn’t a time for a gospel presentation because it is a time for gospel application. This is a time to take the grace that God has extended to you, and feed your children with it. Apply what you believe about God’s mercy and kindness and long suffering towards us, and pour it out to them — in a form they can believe in. Unrest like this is just like a baby crying for a bottle — only what they need is spiritual milk. They need you to feed them, not with a lecture, but with application.

You Have Everything You Need

Mothering is a job that is full of difficult moments. Diapers blow out in stores when you have too much in your cart to just walk out. Sudden carsickness can leave you pulled over on the side of the road wondering just how much can be done with half a bag of wet wipes. You need to take what you believe and apply it to these difficult moments. Does the Bible teach us that God is disgusted by our frailty? That he doesn’t want to carry our burdens? That he doesn’t have the energy to deal with us?

The good news is, you don’t need to have been through some elite mother’s training camp to apply the gospel in your life. You need to believe. Trust God, give thanks. Laugh. Believe — and that will feed your children. Rest in God, and your children will learn to. Extend God’s kindness to you, to them. Forgive them the way God forgave you. You have everything you need to spiritually nourish your children, because you have Christ.

The gospel is not just something to talk about Sunday morning while you are in clean clothes and the kids are looking orderly. It is not limited to quiet times and reflective moods. It is something to apply while you are in a difficult position in the back of the car trying to buckle a child up who is playing the kazoo and needs their nose wiped.

God is not above these moments. He is teaching us, and leading us, and refining us, in them. He wants to see our faith in action. He wants to see us feeding our children with the grace that he has given to us.

Mimic the Gospel

Of course, this side of heaven we will not do perfectly. Harsh words will be spoken, patience will wear thin. Frazzled mothers will act frazzled. And when this happens, our own sinfulness does not detract from the power of the gospel, it illustrates why we need it. Do not use your own mistakes as an excuse to wallow about what a bad mother you are. Repent, seek forgiveness, get it right, and move on. Believe. Be forgiven. Extend that forgiveness, that belief, that joy, to your children.

As you go about your daily transformations, set your heart on the truth. Mimic the gospel in what you do. Bring peace, bring order, bring joy, bring laughter. Bring it because it was brought to you. Give, because it was given to you. The gospel is not too big to fit into little situations. It is too big not to.





One and a half-years old already!

3 05 2012

Actually, due to my tardiness in noting down milestones and blogging, LittlerLam is already 19 months this May and she’s grown so much. I think from what I remember she’s reaching the usual developmental milestones at about the same time as her older sister and I reckon the rest of the kids her age.

One thing she’s always been a little behind though, is her weight. I’ve got one petite fellow who packs a punch in terms of character, voice and energy. In Singapore, we like to call such people Chilli Padi.

Like the chilli padi,

1) She is fiery (ie: if she cannot get her way she will scream and then try to slam/bite the floor or the person who offended her), and we’ve been trying to extricate her from such dangerous situations and tell her very firmly that she isn’t supposed to behave like that.

2) She is smaller than her peers. She’s not even hit 10 kg yet though she’s already 19 months but I’m quite small-boned too so that may be part of the reason.

3) She is bright. Yes, not bright red, but I’ve noticed how she picks up things really quickly (literally and figuratively). She will watch someone handle, for example a toy, or open a bottle or turn the door, and the next moment she is mimicking the movement exactly. She has also learnt to identify several words. I say ‘identify’ because I think it’s probably just memorising the shape of the words rather than ‘reading’ per se, but at least she’s taken an interest to reading.

While the comparisons with the spicy condiment ends here, I thought I’d better list down, for my own memory and record the words she’s learnt to read, recognise, and recently, speak:

Can ‘read’ the words
1) eyes
2) nose
3) mouth
4) teeth
5) hair
6) foot
7) tongue

Can recognise and say the letters A, O and P

Words that she can say clearly and regularly
1) Mama
2) Dada
3) Che Che ( big sister)
4) Papa (grandpa)
5) NaiNai (Paternal grandma)
6) Ball
7) Bear
8) No (usually it’s nononononono…)
9) Ouch! (owowowowo)
10) Hot!
11) Gugu (aunt)
12) Car
13) Bubbles
14) This! (pointing to the item she wants)
15) Chair
16) Mao (cat in Mandarin)
17) Gou (Dog in Mandarin)
18) Hua (flower in Mandarin)

I have a feeling I’m missing a couple out, and this is not including the words she signs, so I think I’m pretty busy communicating with my little one at the moment already!

 





Baby reindeer

11 12 2011

I don’t have many great pictures of LittlerLam cos she really hates dressing up. This is in stark contrast to her older sister who can go overboard with the accessories. But I did manage to get her to wear this for a precious few seconds, in time for me to snap a photo!

“Oh deer!”

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Letter to my baby

13 09 2011

Let's go out!

Dearest LittlerLam,

I can’t believe that you’ll be turning one year old next month! While many other mums (especially 1st-time mums) have been chronicling, scrapbooking and writing about their babies throughout every single milestone in the first year, I have been well…rather slack. I’m sorry if you don’t have as many photographs as your older sister and that you always end up having to crawl around by yourself at home, navigating dangerous spots (caused by your big sister) all by yourself. But I’m glad that while you don’t have Daddy and Mummy’s full attention, you have an extra playmate that your big sister never had. I’m quite sure you sometimes much prefer her company than mine because your face lights up when we mention her name, you squeal excitedly when you pass her room, and cry when she goes off to Kindy. The two of you are beginning to be able to play together despite the 4 year age gap, and it’s hilarious when CheChe climbs into the playpen with you. Of course it also almost gives me a heart attack when I see the bottom straining with the combined weight!

Weight. Ah yes. That is a bit of a sensitive point when it comes to you,  my dear. Mummy has been constantly trying to get you up to an average weight since you were born and it’s been a bit of a struggle. Not because you don’t eat or drink milk much – in fact, you enjoy your rice porridge with lots of goodies like salmon, threadfin, beef, tofu, chicken, brocolli, carrots, pumpkin, sweet potato, corn, cauliflower and ikan billis powder all in different variations! Every day I’ve got to cook half a pot of porridge for you, which you happily eat up for lunch and dinner.  The last time I weighed you at the paediatrician you were 10+ months and exactly 8kg. Which is a BIG BIG improvement because this time you are only about 0.5kg away from the average weight!! I was so happy that finally you were looking more chubby and feeling heavy despite falling sick EVERY SINGLE MONTH since you were born. You are so good with taking medicine with a syringe now, and I am so thankful that you don’t usually kick up a fuss, unless it is antibiotics! I thank God that despite your constant falling sick, you are still growing well and meeting your milestones.

You grew 4 teeth around 8months old and at 7months was able to sit up by yourself. Now at 11+ months you are standing up by yourself without support for about 5 seconds now! You are an absolute joy to play with now (even though it totally kills my joints and it is soooo tiring) because you are so responsive and communicative. Also this is the classic stage where babies are the cutest (in my opinion) and this was the time when we played so much with CheChe too. You enjoy TOTALLY different things from your big sister though. While she was always sitting and reading, listening to us read and learning objects, alphabets etc, you refuse to sit quietly to watch us read to you. You must ALWAYS grab and lunge at the book and then when in possession of it, must flip it, swing it around, whack it on the floor, like you do to every other toy/ object you get a hold of. You also have a special knack for searching out the thinnest or ‘most grasp-able’ part of an object and holding it tight, then swing/whack/ shake the item to check out if it makes a sound, and what other sound it makes when hit against different surfaces. Unfortunately sometimes the surface includes my face, or your own head. You have very good psycho-motor skills and fine-motor skills, able to pick up very tiny objects from a young age and also able to sign ‘book’, wave ‘hi’, ‘bye’ and indicate ‘no more’ with the twisting of the wrists.

You are one unique one, and I believe a very tough cookie. You survive almost daily knocks to the head and falls (of course very minor ones…nothing serious) and cry for only a while before you continue trying to stand, pull, walk along by pushing CheChe’s chair. Your very favourite position is to stand at CheChe’s table and disturb her while she tries to draw/eat/ do homework!

You have so many other interesting antics I don’t have time now to write them all down, but they are stored in my memory, my dear. So please forgive me if this could be the only entry I ever write chronicling your cuteness because I’m busy cooking, cleaning, bathing, cleaning, cooking, washing for you.

Love lots, Mum

p.s: Very soon I won’t be able to post pictures of you on this blog because you will be losing the generic baby look and starting to look like a little person. So here’s a couple for now, for posterity!

Gesticulating wildly!

Watch out! Learner driver!

Inundated!





Fun at Pasir Ris Park

24 08 2011

Over the weekend, we were blessed with being able to ballot for a beautiful bungalow chalet right opposite Pasir Ris park. We held Littlelam’s 5th birthday celebration there, and the kids had a whale of a time. Poor Littlelam was having a runny nose the entire time though, so the birthday photos were a disaster cos she refused to smile! But at least everyone had fun at the park, even LittlerLam, who, at 10months sat on the swing for the very first time. This is the only place in Singapore I’ve found these type of swings made for babies. In fact, even the kids swings are such a rarity here that everyone just wanted to swing and there was always a little queue of kids at the swings.

More on the birthday party another time when the photos my FIL took are ready.

In the meantime, here are some pics of the kids at the park:

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LittlerLam enjoying the swing!

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Climbing the iconing Web structure

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Littlelam on the Flying Fox

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The nearby beach





Sporty baby!

18 08 2011

Now that my wordpress app is working properly again, I can happily post pics and blog more often- short and sweet posts, that is.

Since I hardly have any time to write down and nicely scrapbook about LittlerLam’s development and milestones like I did for her big sister, i guess using this blog for quick notes would be better than nothing at all!

This little one is already 10months old and is crawling and climbing everywhere! Besides loving to stand up by holding on to the edge of her big sister’s table, she also loves to play on her sister’s old toys- the Jumperoo and the rocking moose:

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