Are you good
at your job? How can you tell? Increased salary? Accolades? More
responsibility? Advancement? Maybe all of these together combined
with an office and good health insurance?
I've never gotten any of that and
having an awesome office in the future is unlikely. That's because
my chosen vocation is a homemaker. Now, some of you may be feeling
sorry for me about now, “Oh, that poor girl, locked in her house
all day...” But, your pity would be wasted. You see, I'm a
college educated, reasonably intelligent woman who's chosen to stay
at home and take care of her husband and her children. I've chosen
to be a homemaker when there were other options – easier options,
financially rewarding options, intellectually fulfilling options. I
chose, along with my husband, to be a homemaker, the maker of a home.
The responsibilities of a homemaker are
great and I pile more upon myself because I'm loathe to buy bread
when I can make it at home and I've actually taken to ironing the vintage
napkins we use daily, passed down from Bobby's relatives. I pack
lunches and cart the boys to school when they miss the bus. I
occasionally meet my husband for lunch and try to start cooking
dinner each night at 5. But, I also talk my 70 - something year old
next-door-neighbor into going to matinee movies, and attend Bible
studies and pray for the school my children attend.
What I don't do is sit around eating
bonbons. Where did that idea come from anyway? If I spent all day
on the couch (and I'm not saying it's NEVER happened), everyone in my
house would know it and my punishment would be merciless teasing.
There would be Pizza Hut for dinner and no clean socks. I have
admitted before and will admit again to times of laziness – one
more episode of Last Man Standing or just 30 minutes more of
Elizabeth Gaskell's North and South. And, I am not as industrious as
other women I know. But, I'm rarely afraid to open the door of my
home to someone.
I'll be the first to say that I'm
shockingly bad at a lot of the things my job entails. I make
breakfast for my boys every day, but forget to deposit the birthday
checks they received from grandparents. I used to sew adorable
holiday outfits for my twin toddlers, but would let the dust lie on
the furniture. My friend, LeeAnn, says she's a great “straightener”
not a great cleaner. I can't say I'm great at either. But, I don't
know that I was “great” at my other jobs either, definitely not
all aspects of them. I've worked at a Hallmark shop and a dress
shop, taught school and piano, been a missionary and a sous chef,
handled customer service for a website and sold scrap-booking
supplies. I loved parts of all those jobs and was really good at
parts of them. Actually, they're probably the same parts I'm good at
now – relationships and creating. I'm still terrible at organizing
and repetitive stuff.
I know I'm extraordinarily blessed to
be a stay at home wife and mom. I know that's not even a possibility
for many and I count it a privilege. I'm grateful my husband thinks
it's just as important as I do that I'm here – keeping the home
fires burning.
But, it hasn't always been easy. This
is a life of service, a life of duty and selflessness. That's hard
for someone as selfish as I am. Though the people I serve most are
super cute, I sometimes think they're impossibly demanding. I
sometimes have to deal with pity and condescension (from within and
without!), or others thinking that I have time for anything because
I'm “just a stay at home mom”.
Before we married, Bobby introduced me
to a song by Paul Overstreet called Homemaker. It talked about his
wife's amazing abilities. She could have done whatever she wanted,
“She could take this world and turn it on.” But, she chose to
stay at home, “but, she takes her love and makes our house a home.”
I felt so validated by that and by the fact that Bobby showed it to
me.
When I get too whiny, I think of my
Swiss friend's grandmother. Miriam's grandfather was a watchmaker.
His hands were his livelihood, so he refused to do any manual labor.
Miriam's grandmother was left to chop the wood and build the fires
(literally keeping the home fires burning!) in addition to
her other responsibilities. I can turn up the heat with the touch of
a button and turn down the complaining with a prayer of thanksgiving.
I once heard a missionary say he wasn't
called to the mission field, that instead he was compelled by Christ
to go. I feel like that about staying at home. It's definitely a
calling, sometimes it seems it would be easier to find a job. But,
even when things have been financially hard, Bobby and I have both
felt compelled for me to stay where I am. I think our lives are
better for it, even if our savings or college fund isn't.
My Bible study teacher in college,
Betty Thomas, was instrumental in opening my eyes to this way of
life. She taught that being a homemaker was a high and holy calling
and I've come to believe that it's true. She said that Ruth Graham,
wife to Billy Graham, had a sign over her kitchen sink that said,
“Divine work conducted here 3 times daily.” Preaching to
thousands isn't the only form of divine service. Maybe making a
great pimiento cheese sandwich and serving it with love is divine,
too (especially, when it's homemade pimiento cheese and toasted until
it's crispy and melted!).
Though the challenges can be
frustrating, the rewards are worth their weight in gold. My children
love to have friends over and we sometimes don't want to leave once
we're all home. When we were packing to move from Nebraska to
Pennsylvania, my son Davis threw himself on the floor of our basement
in exhausted frustration saying, “Why do we have all this stuff?”
I replied that it makes our house homey. Then, Davis shocked me by
saying, “Stuff doesn't make our house homey. You do.” Awwww...
Though it won't fully fund our
retirement account, that comment and ones like it are priceless and
let me know I'm doing a good job.
Recently, a friend paid me a huge
compliment. Faith had been by my home to borrow a necklace and I
invited her to stay for tea. A week or so later she called to see if
she could return the necklace and asked if she could invite herself
for tea again. I smile to think of it. That blessing could easily
have been turned down – uh, my house is too messy, I don't have any
tea! But, I just threw the door open anyway and received a great
blessing in Faith's visit and presence.
I'm not saying every woman should be a
stay home wife or mom, just as I don't think everyone should be an
orthodontist or pastor, and I know not everyone would want to. I'm
just saying I'm thankful I can and you, my dear friend, can invite
yourself over for tea any time!
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