Have you ever considered the phrase, "you did your best, that's all that matters". I am sure I am not the only one who heard this as a child(maybe not when I got a 7 out of 100 on a Chemistry test)...and I know I will say these words to my own children when they are old enough to understand. "Our best"...I feel like the older I get, the more pressure I put on myself to be my "best" for so many people...and somehow along the way, "best" has been twisted into "perfection". I am a self-proclaimed people-pleaser...always have been, and while I have worked on this, I probably always will be-to some extent. I think people-pleasers are at their very core a bit of a perfectionist. I hate the term perfectionist because I know there is no such thing as earthly perfection, so I think it sounds almost vain, but the type of perfection I am referring to is more of an emotional perfection. The emotional need that some of us women feel to be "all things" to all people...to make everyone happy. I am that person. I have always been that person, but now I am that person with a husband and 2 precious young children. I am that person with dinners to cook, friends to be called, a house to be cleaned, family to be checked on, etc. etc. At the end of the day, I just don't feel like I can keep up. I feel like I have let people down because I forget to send a birthday text...or forgot to check on their sick child, or forget to take a meal to the church member who had a baby, and so on and so on.
As I was standing in the shower the other day, I asked myself, "am I doing my best?" And to my surprise, the answer is yes. While my "best" feels very mediocre, at this stage in my life, it truly is the best I can give. As simple as this sounds, it really freed my mind and my heart to stop being so hard on myself. I don't have to beat myself up for being forgetful, or for not doing as much for others as I would like to be doing, or for sometimes serving the same meal 3 nights in a row (I have a great husband who doesn't complain), or for not having a Pinterest Award worthy gift for my son's class at Christmas. I am doing my best. Period. I don't want to go through life feeling overwhelmed or feeling guilt for not being able to do it all. I have spent a few weeks now trying to simplify things as much as possible. One of my favorite sayings-"you make time for what's important to you". This requires determining what IS most important to you...which for me is my Savior, my family and my friends. Even our friendships need reassessing from time to time-which is no easy task, but a necessary one...to determine which friendships are worth your time, energy and love.
Each season in our lives brings about new and different challenges...and I'm finding the importance to treat each "season" as just that...a season. I think in recognizing how taxing the challenges of our current season can be on us, it can also create a deeper understanding in what those around us may be feeling. Grace is a beautiful thing and we all need it...but I sometimes forget to give it to myself. So with the new year, I am going to give myself the gift of grace as my New Year's Resolution...so that I can let go of feeling mediocre :)
"But he gives more grace. Therefore it says, God opposes
the proud, but gives grace to the humble.” James 4:6
Each season in our lives brings about new and different challenges...and I'm finding the importance to treat each "season" as just that...a season. I think in recognizing how taxing the challenges of our current season can be on us, it can also create a deeper understanding in what those around us may be feeling. Grace is a beautiful thing and we all need it...but I sometimes forget to give it to myself. So with the new year, I am going to give myself the gift of grace as my New Year's Resolution...so that I can let go of feeling mediocre :)
"But he gives more grace. Therefore it says, God opposes
the proud, but gives grace to the humble.” James 4:6

You are wonderful with everything you do. You are the one that other women look at and say "She does everything perfectly!" You just can't do it all....nobody can. By the time you get old like me, you realize that most of the time your mistakes aren't even evident to other people. Remember my gorgeous coconut cake that began to slide apart right before the Christmas Open House? I put it in a bowl, called it TRIFLE and it was the hit of the night. That is the way that almost everything goes. Our mistakes are only seen by us - most people just don't notice or care!! You are a fabulous wife, mother, daughter, friend, Christian and yes, housekeeper and decorater!! Skip mediocre. The ones we see and think they have it all together are usually the ones that actually have all kinds of issues beneath the surface. As the old people say "You can't judge a book by its cover"!! Love you sweetheart!!! Don't get "fwustrated"!! :)
ReplyDeleteThis is beautifully state Bethany. It reminds me of my mom's life verses, taken from Mark 14:6,8 when Jesus says " Leave her alone... she did what she could." As a mom of four, one with special needs, my mom says those verses help her dump feelings of perfectionist guilt. She says she doesn't do it all, doesn't do it perfectly, but she does what she can!
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