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“I hate you, you fat b*tch!” My 5-year-old daughter screamed as the nurse prepped the needle.
Everyone in the room, including my husband and I picked our jaws up off the floor. We had spent a frustrating week at Boston Children’s Hospital and we all wanted to scream profanities, only my daughter didn’t a have a filter.
“Where did you learn to swear like that?” My husband inquired while gritting his teeth.
“Head Start,” Emma pouted matter-a-factly.
Head Start had given my daughter a head start—on swearing.
As parents, it was embarrassing.
As pastors, it was mortifying.
When I wasn’t stressing about the mass in my daughter’s chest—I was laden with guilt as a mom.
Where did we go wrong?
Maybe we didn’t discipline her enough?
Why is she so angry?
The truth is, behind every great kid is a mom who is sure she is screwing it all up.
But guilt isn’t based upon facts but originates from the Liar himself.
And every lie has a root.
Guilt’s root: I’m not doing enough.
Whether you’re a working mother who beats herself up about the time spent away, or a stay-at-home mom who finds herself resenting her kids, we all experience the overwhelming sense that we aren’t cut out for the job.
Guess what? You’re not.
We all suck at parenting when we start.
If you don’t think you’re selfish—have a child. I guarantee within forty-eight hours between midnight feedings and diaper explosions, you’ll realize how self-centered you truly are.
Every one of us is in desperate need of God’s grace. Grace is the undeserved favor of God demonstrated by Jesus’ death for every one of our screwups. We don’t have what it takes to be a good parent. We need buckets of grace to bridge the chasm between our intentions and our failures.
In traditional Japanese art, liquid gold is used to bind together fragments of broken pottery. Each crack is etched in gold leaf and formed into a new creation—one in which its brokenness and faults are completely apparent—yet stunning because of His grace.
Ask for God’s grace and let him make you into a new creation.
We can’t give what we don’t have.
Several years ago, I lost the diamond from my engagement ring. I swept every nook of our home with no luck. That night, my son found me crying in the kitchen. Without saying a word, he ran upstairs to grab his piggybank and shook in out onto the counter. Out plopped three quarters and a mound of pennies.
"Here mom, buy yourself a new diamond,” Jeremiah gleamed with pride.
“Oh Honey, I love that you would give me all your money, but it’s not enough.”
I would never expect my son to supply the funds to replace my engagement ring, yet we oftentimes put expectations on ourselves and others to give what they don’t have.
Maybe your parents grew up in a cold home where work, not love was the priority.
Maybe you never heard the words, “I love you” as a child.
Maybe you are suffering through a divorce, an illness, or loss and are struggling to be the parent you know your child deserves .
Listen to me, you can't give what you don't have. (Refer back to Point #1)
Your child is on loan. They aren’t yours, they’re His.
“For this child I prayed, and the Lord has granted my petition. Therefore, I have given him to the Lord…” (1 Samuel 1:28)
There is a story in the Bible about a mom named Hannah. For years, she struggled with infertility and continually poured her soul out to God, begging for a baby. Eventually, Hannah finds herself pregnant with a son whom she names Samuel, meaning “God hears."
Yet this isn’t the most miraculous part of the story. Once Samuel is weaned, at three years old, Hannah presents her son to Eli the priest and leaves him to be raised in the temple.
The greatest gift a mother can give her child is to entrust them to God—after all, He’s their real Dad and he loves them far more than we ever could.