Before becoming, and especially once pregnant, I was
determined to work on not having any expectations for our children and
ourselves. I knew it was important to
learn each other, nurture and love each other, rather than to stress over the
details of our life that would soon be changing quickly.
Months into parenthood, I realized I was developing
expectations about our routine and how we spent our days (and nights) as I have
previously posted. Even with great
intentions, expectations can dangerously creep into our lives and become our
focus.
I mention the slippery slope of expectations because I
believe it is the twin of the comparison trap.
Just like expectations, even when we set off on our journey with
intentions of avoiding these landmines, we end up falling short and set down
the road of comparing. It’s important to
differentiate between general observations and the comparisons I am talking
about. Noticing someone has brown or
blond hair, is short or tall, male or female, etc… Those are in my opinion general
observations. In my mind, comparisons
are a ‘heart issue’ instead. What do we
do with these general observations we make?
How much of our energy is used thinking about these comparisons? How do we voice them if at all? Do they make us feel uplifted or depressed?
Part I: Unleashing Our Comparisons On Others
For some reason, ushering into marriage for most of us
brings about the unavoidable temptation to compare our spouse and/or our
marriage with others we see around us.
Is our spouse meeting our ‘expectations’ we should have never placed on
him/her? Is our marriage ‘as romantic’
as our friends? Whatever it might be we
are comparing, it’s wrong just as expectations are wrong. It’s beautiful to have goals and hope, but if
our expectations are anything other than ‘of the Lord’, they are unrighteous
thoughts that, without God’s help and grace, can lead others and ourselves into
a prison possibly for a life sentence.
No matter how we have learned to handle (or not handle) our
comparisons in marriage, nothing brings out this ‘twin’ like parenthood
does. From our children’s first day we
begin to unconsciously compare him/her to others. How much do they weigh and what is their
height? Why is a ‘big baby’ worthy of
more ‘praise’ than a petite baby in our society? From thence forth, their weight and height is
always a topic amongst parents. Again,
the same question? As the child grows,
parents begin to compare their physical developments with each other and then
their ‘mental’ developments as well.
Soon parents compare them based on their academic and behavioral
‘success’. Then it’s comparing them in
sports, the job force, their marriage and their kids. It’s a never-ending trap that sucks the life
out of them, our family and us.
I cannot stress enough just how important, just how vital,
it is to remember that God made each child of ours, and others, exactly how He
planned. Each child is fearfully and
wonderfully made! Knit together inside
his/her mother’s womb by our Creator, the giver of every life! He has a special plan for each child; a
unique plan for their lives. He blessed
each child with certain gifts and talents to be used later for His glory. He loves each child more than we can ever
fathom. It is our job as parents to
nurture, love and shepherd this beautiful child(ren) we have been entrusted
with in the ways of the Lord. Rear them
to be the unique person God made them to be.
Celebrate whom God made them to be, not who you or society wants them to
be! Children should never be compared
with their siblings or other children we know.
They shouldn’t be made to conform to the ‘books’ we read on parenting.
Perhaps I’m so passionate about this because God has blessed
and entrusted Jason and me with twin boys, and for some reason, society places
so many unjust comparisons on twins.
Whether identical or fraternal as Gavin and Wyatt are, twins are unique
individuals just as any other child would be.
Yes, they may share uncanny similarities and a bond that is like no
other, but they are still 100% individuals.
That means each will develop differently, have different passions and
talents. Yes, the similarities may be
high, but they are not the same and should never be treated the same.
I do not understand the unnecessary comments and comparisons
when we are out in public. Why people we
do not even know feel the need to tell me one is taller than the other, one
seems more friendly than the other, their head shapes are different, etc. is
beyond me! Again, general observations
are normal, but it’s what we do with them that is important. When we make an observation, that should be
it, just an observation and we move on.
No more thinking about it. I know
some might disagree with me on this, but here is where I’m coming from.
Our two oldest sons are 2 minutes apart. We’re currently pregnant with our youngest
son who will be 17 months younger. Boys
by nature compete. I’m well of aware of
this and never want to hinder this. But
one of my many strongest prayers is that Gavin, Wyatt and Luke learn to embrace
and support how God has specially and uniquely made them and each of their
brothers. I want this celebration for
each person’s uniqueness to spill over into their every day life as they
interact with others and develop outside relationships. I pray for this in our home, but I know there
is no way to remove this comparison trap from society. It will be used as a teaching tool in our
home for sure, but oh how I pray more would be awakened to the damaging affects
of comparison. Through prayer and God’s
grace, He alone can work on our hearts to help us in this area.
Part II: Unleashing Our Comparisons On Ourselves
I’ve been talking to a couple of my good friends the past
couple of weeks about this topic of comparing children. In addition, we’ve all confessed with sad
hearts the bondage we can create by comparing ourselves with others; whether in
our marriage and/or in parenting. As a
SAHM I’m constantly thinking, am I cooking well enough and keeping the house
clean enough. I am blessed with an
amazing supportive husband who creates zero pressure on me in this area, and
yet I still fret. Why can a friend of
mine seem to be doing so much better in a certain area? What can I do to improve? The most important thoughts in my mind of
course circle endlessly about my relationship with my husband and my
children. Am I nurturing each
relationship as it should? Am I walking
with God in each of these areas? What
can I be doing better? Better, better,
better? What can I improve on? Am I teaching my children correctly? Am I shepherding them to follow Christ? The list is endless. I see something another woman is doing and think,
‘should I be doing that?’
I’ll go back to my thoughts on general observations. It’s great to learn new things and try new
things from others! It’s part of being
in a community that I think God wanted us to experience. But how much of our energy is focused on
this? How do I feel about myself, or
life when thinking of these observations?
We can fall into this pit without ever realizing it. One day we just wake up and realized we’ve
been swallowed and we’ve lost our Focus and Light. As we know, He’s never gone, but when our
eyes are not focused on Him, we are lost.
Just as we learn to give our children the grace God so lavishes on us
daily (and let’s face it, hourly and by the minute!), we need to just as
importantly allow ourselves to receive the grace He’s already given us. Share with each other and learn with each other,
but do not compare. Take great comfort
in walking your days with the Lord and letting Him lead you and your
family. Keep Him the focus and not others. Find your continual peace and joy in Him, and
Him alone. For no one can provide us
what our hearts long for except for Him who created it! Pray to grow in God’s time, but do not long
for it or make it your focus.
I thank God for speaking to my heart as I type these
words. I thank God for opening my eyes
and heart to realize that I too often place ‘my growth’ before Him. Striving to become better can easily become
my focus. I’m thankful for God’s gentle
whispers and healing touch to remind me to rest in Him.
May we all better learn to relish in the grace of God
through Christ, and freely pour it out our spouse, children and all those
around us.
great post Shanna! As we discussed yesterday, I'm "so there!"
ReplyDeleteOn another note, thank the boys in the morning...Elle started walking today! I KNOW it was from Wyatt and Gavin being awesome examples for her!!!
We are so excite for Elle! Oh the fun she'll have (and you two)! I'm glad she didn't pick up the tantrum, hehe! Boys had a great day yesterday and this morning, so yay for that too! Hugs to you all!
Deletethanks for your openness on this subject. it is an every day look at our inner thoughts - definitely a training...peace.
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