For years I struggled how to answer people when they asked me what I do for a living. Wipe noses? Change diapers? Stroll the neighborhood with a double stroller jammed with my daughter and twin boys? Now I guess my answer would be more along the lines of drive to school, check homework, do laundry, and pack lunches or sports bags. But I always sensed that my generation didn't see staying home full time with my kids as a glamorous or sexy career choice. And I guess, in honesty, it's not. So I would try and make myself sound better. I would say I am a writer (which was and is true) and make whatever projects I was working on seem glossier than they really were. For too long I bought into the lie that a full calendar is a full life.
Then one day I decided to own my choice to stay home because it is intertwined with who I am. I don't ever remember having lofty career goals, but I do remember wanting a family and being a mom. I have been fortunate enough to not have to work outside my home, but it's more than that. It's how I'm wired. I like being home and doing laundry, paying the bills, making phone calls, and fixing what needs fixed. (Okay, maybe the bill paying is a stretch.) I love walking the dog or making soup for a sick friend. I love that when the kids get home from school I have a snack waiting and when my husband walks in the door, the scent of dinner in the oven wafts through the house.
I think our world is spinning too fast. No, not every day is exactly like the one I described above. In the spring my life is softball practice and games and football in the fall. But I love that too. And I try in every season of life to make sure that a calm, safe haven is what awaits for myself and my brood.
So now when people ask me what I do, my answer is "I'm a homemaker". A 1950's sounding word? Maybe. But I like it because I think it defines me in one word. I make a home. And a lot of blood, sweat, tears, and prayer go into that. I happen to write as well, but it's not the job I am most proud of. I receive no financial reward for my labor as a homemaker, but I can see in the faces of my family all the reward I will ever need.
Then one day I decided to own my choice to stay home because it is intertwined with who I am. I don't ever remember having lofty career goals, but I do remember wanting a family and being a mom. I have been fortunate enough to not have to work outside my home, but it's more than that. It's how I'm wired. I like being home and doing laundry, paying the bills, making phone calls, and fixing what needs fixed. (Okay, maybe the bill paying is a stretch.) I love walking the dog or making soup for a sick friend. I love that when the kids get home from school I have a snack waiting and when my husband walks in the door, the scent of dinner in the oven wafts through the house.
I think our world is spinning too fast. No, not every day is exactly like the one I described above. In the spring my life is softball practice and games and football in the fall. But I love that too. And I try in every season of life to make sure that a calm, safe haven is what awaits for myself and my brood.
So now when people ask me what I do, my answer is "I'm a homemaker". A 1950's sounding word? Maybe. But I like it because I think it defines me in one word. I make a home. And a lot of blood, sweat, tears, and prayer go into that. I happen to write as well, but it's not the job I am most proud of. I receive no financial reward for my labor as a homemaker, but I can see in the faces of my family all the reward I will ever need.