February 06, 2012

Stripping Away the Mom Mask

As the wife of a pastor I am keenly aware that there are plenty of people watching me and my children to see if we are going to mess up. I can tell you right now...we have, we do and we will, just like you will.

The majority of the mistakes I have made are directly related to my need to measure up to the standards of those around me. Since everyone lives by different standards (even within the same church community), you can imagine how confusing that was for all of us. It seemed as if the only way to survive was to acquiesce. Not only did that fail to please the critics, it failed to bless my children.

I grew up 800 miles from our home. Whenever we would go to see family, there was pressure to spend time doing what everyone else thought we should do. We would bend our entire vacation around the expectations of others. No matter how we planned it, someone was offended. We spent more time with someone else or gave them a better part of the day or more often than not, said something someone didn't like. Then it hit me, this was a game we weren't going to win. I learned that no matter what I did, there would be judgement from someone. Once I realized that, I became free. Free to be myself, free to bless my family and free to peel off the mask. From there on out, we chose to do what was best for the family God had given us!

My mask wasn't fooling anyone. Pleasing everybody pleased nobody! Instead, it was confusing to my daughter. I'm sure she spent her early years wondering which mommy to listen to. Private Mommy, wanted her to be her creative, expressive self. Public Mommy who expected her to be compliant it would seem for compliance sake. Private Mommy was fun to be around, Public Mommy was cranky and stressed out. All of this in an effort to prove my worth as a woman and a mother.

I'm two chapters in to the book "Truefaced". Not far enough in to recommend it but already blessed by the freedom I'm finding in who I am. Who my Creator made me to be. It has always been my heart to instill that in my children. Now I feel as if I have the permission to be myself and that is a treasure! I am a flawed, imperfect and fallible woman whose beauty and worth comes from the God of the Universe. My worth is unchanged by the opinions of others. That is freedom for not only you but for your children as well.

What mask are you wearing? Who are you wearing it for? How well is it working?

Always,

Hope


I wrote this for:

7 comments:

Kathleen Quiring | Project M said...

My baby's only five months old, so Private Mommy and Public Mommy haven't had much time to develop, but I can see the early stages of both. Private Mommy is confident in her parenting choices, trusting her child's ability to communicate her needs. Public Mommy second-guesses herself, and doubts her child's inherent wisdom. I want very much for Public and Private Mommy to be the same person, for some of the reasons you outline. That's why I so appreciate learning from those who have gone before me. Thanks for sharing your experiences!

RumorsOfGlory said...

I'm reading True Faced too!

Unknown said...

My goodness... Your post brought back so many memories of my (former) life as a PW.
That mask was there for way to long and for me freedom from the mask came at the expense of my marriage sadly. I am so glad that you have found that freedom now.
I celebrate that with you, for you & your family. Your daughter will one day thank you for taking the mask away early on.
My guys are now teenagers and they tell me now they see a real difference in me.

Be Blessed!
Kelley

Sarah Bessey said...

Private Mum vs. Public Mum - Oh, ouch! You've hit on something really profound here, J. I love it (and you). (P.S. Told you you were a writer. xo)

Shoebotmom said...

Fantastic. I know the struggle between Private vs Public Mommy. So hard to be true to yourself and please people at the same time. I'm so much happier when I can just be me....no matter where I am or who I'm with. Thanks for the great post.

Mondays with Mac said...

"My worth is unchanged by the opinions of others." I needed to hear that. If only it was easier to believe at times. Thank-you for the great post.

C'est l'abeille said...

"I am a flawed, imperfect and fallible woman whose beauty and worth comes from the God of the Universe. My worth is unchanged by the opinions of others."
...ummm, can I get an "AMEN, SISTAH!"?
The day that we all dawn to that truth that our worth is unchanged by the opinions of others is the day we start to live in freedom.