Sometimes, I don’t love all that well.

Love you forever, love you for always. Happy Valentines Day. xoxo

Love is patient and kind. Love is not jealous or boastful or proud or rude. It does not demand its own way. It is not irritable, and it keeps no record of being wronged. It does not rejoice about injustice but rejoices whenever the truth wins out. Love never gives up, never loses faith, is always hopeful, and endures through every circumstance. (1 Cor 13:4-7)

Most often quoted for weddings, this passage can sometimes slip right past me like an old cliché. Perhaps it’s the familiarity that breeds complacency (or a lack of conviction?).

Yesterday I read these words (by “chance”) and they’ve been ringing around my head and my heart ever since. I’ve been in a rough stint with the littles lately. I’ve been stretched beyond stretched as I’ve tried to navigate tantrums and demands and big, big personalities and loud, loud voices coming from my little, little children.

Levi is sensitive, colorful, dramatic, and opinionated. He’s as strong-willed as I am (yowza) and can flip a switch at the drop of a hat. He’s very quick to melt down into puddles at the moment and his needs are dramatically changing as he requires a different sort of attention than I’ve grown accustomed to giving him. And even though he’s struggling in his little heart to figure out right from wrong and where he should draw all the lines, he’s also really concerned with whether or not mom and dad are pleased with him and very affected by how we respond to his misbehavior. He’s an absolute sweet heart… having emotional and mental growing pains that are setting him on edge.

Judah is physical, strong, determined, and loud. (I used to think I knew what loud was, but Judah has turned that definition upside down. He’s… amazing.) He cries a lot (and sometimes screams and yells) and is very high needs in terms of physical contact. Add to that a very fiery temper and the tendency to hit and it can be a fairly potent combination. He seems to be endlessly struggling with separation anxiety and if I am anywhere in sight when he’s even slightly upset, he amps it all up by another 30% and is almost inconsolable until he has my undivided attention and my arms to himself. He’s quick to laugh and cuddle up close, but then just as quick to scream and hit and flail himself onto the floor. (Wow, it really is impressive.)

Most days I’ve felt anything but patient as of late. Quite the opposite, I feel quick to lose it and quick to react, rather than respond. I desperately want to be kind and I’m brutally aware of the power of word choice and tone, and yet lately the words coming through my thought process are anything but kind or honoring. It takes every ounce of self control I can muster to keep my mouth shut and not explode and spew all over my kids. (And maybe I don’t actually yell, but isn’t anger and venom within the mind just as dangerous?)

I’ve felt intense desire to give up what I know to be right for what a moment of desperation might bring – to yell, to hit, to banish or just send them out of my sight. Or maybe just to slam a door and storm off to my own little tantrum. Fight or flight kicks in and I want to do both at any given moment. I’ve certainly not felt hopeful that they will ever learn what we’re trying to instill in their little hearts. (Even though, yes, I know they will eventually.)

And endurance? Well, mostly I’ve wanted to go back to bed… not endure or persevere.

Irritability? I’m not even going to comment on that one. Yikes. Grump city.

That right there, friends? That’s the honest truth.

I know this season will pass quickly. I know that things aren’t as bad as they sometimes feel. I know that every parent goes through ages and stages like this where the kids literally require everything we’ve got (and more, or so it feels). I know that His grace is sufficient. I know I’m a good mom and that I don’t need to be paranoid about screwing up my kids. I know, I know, I know, I know.

I know all of these things. Really. I do.

But sometimes reading passages like the one out of Paul’s letter to the Corinthians only reminds me of what the outworking of love should look like in my life… and how far away from living those truths that I sometimes feel. The disparity between what I know and what I feel and do can seem large and overwhelming and just plain hard.

And yet I refuse to live under the suffocation of not good enough and so I remind myself (and you, friends) of what Paul’s really trying to say here: that love is enough.

That love is perfect and unending and never gives up. That it always hangs in there. Always forgives and always lets go. That it’s always growing and giving birth and setting free. That it never demands payment or resorts to power plays but always defaults to kindness and looks for ways to extend grace.

I would say in a heartbeat that I love my kids more than anything in the world, and yet I can say in the same breath that my love often doesn’t look the way Paul describes. It shows me that even as I help them to grow, I’m not yet done growing myself.

They are my greatest teachers – teaching me where I am still weak, still childish, still in need of Love to move in and take up residence in areas of my heart and mind. They remind me that they only way real change can come is from the inside out.

So as I prepare to celebrate the Day of Love with my family tomorrow I let God remind me that he is patient. He is kind. He is never rude or arrogant or demanding or unforgiving. He never gives up on me, always believes in me, always sees the best in me, and never leaves my side. And as I allow his love to grow within me, my capacity to love them can’t help but grow too.

I’m so grateful to love and be loved.

I’m so grateful for a chance to start fresh every day.

Dear God, help me love these littles today. Help me love them well.

Love you forever. Love you for always. Happy Valentines Day.

Dear friends, happy Valentines Day to you. Wherever you’re at in life, I hope that today would be a day that you experience genuine love – the giving and receiving of it. Love covers over so much of our inadequacies and insecurities and inabilities. May Love find it’s destination in your life today. Happy Heart Day.

About Author

Adriel Booker is an author, speaker, and advocate based in Sydney, Australia who believes storytelling, beauty, and the grace of God will change the world. Adriel has become a trusted voice in areas of motherhood and parenting, Christian spirituality, and global women's issues. She's also known for her work with the Love A Mama Collective—serving under-resourced women in developing nations through safe birth initiatives—as well as her years spent as a Bible teacher and leadership coach. Her latest book is Grace Like Scarlett: Grieving with Hope after Miscarriage and Loss and she's made the companion grief journal available for free. Find Adriel across all social media platforms at @adrielbooker or sign up for LoveNotes, Adriel's 'secret posts' that aren't published anywhere else online. ✌️

11 Comments

  • Teva
    14 February 2013 at 12:54 am

    I could have written a very similar post. Thanks for letting me know I am not alone.

    Reply
  • Kate
    14 February 2013 at 6:24 am

    ADRIEL I have been thinking about this exact sane thing. Especially with Elle, and I actually feel I ask her forgiveness too many times in a day… I need Gods help. Thank you for sharing this. May Gods love fill our hearts in every moment for our little ones.

    Reply
  • Rochelle Dunsbergen
    14 February 2013 at 2:30 pm

    This is so encouraging. I feel like this is my daily struggle. Fight or flight, for sure. I am so frustrated with my failings. I am learning that I am easily angered and when pushed consistently by 3 different yet strong wills, and thinking of baby #4 coming in a few months I am truly explosive. I hate it. I want to be transformed. Sometimes it feels like an impossible task. Right now, I am definitely feeling defeated, exhausted, and ready to quit. But I can’t. I want to do it right. Oh Jesus, please be near.

    Reply
    • Adriel Booker
      14 February 2013 at 10:05 pm

      aw, bless your heart rochelle!!! you are an amazing mom and the fact that you can even see your weaknesses speaks volumes about your character. he will have his way with us!! not always easy, right? but sooo worth it.

      it must be hard with three little ones and being pregnant. that’s a huge load for anyone to carry. even supermom. 😉 honestly, you need grace! PRAYING for grace for you in great measures in this season. and remember that you are not alone!! (please shoot me an email ANY time that you need prayer, ok? i TOTALLY get it!!) xx
      Adriel Booker recently posted..How my friend lost 50 pounds, gained energy, and took back her health with Isagenix CleansingMy Profile

      Reply
  • Celestine
    15 February 2013 at 2:16 pm

    Thank you for this post. I have been struggling as of late with these same thoughts and feelings with my children, knowing what I should be like and instead seeing how I have actually been acting or thinking. :\ Just thank you so much. If it weren’t for my break from Facebook, I don’t believe I would have found this post. 🙂 Jesus has his reasons for guiding me to messages I need to hear and take to heart.

    Reply
  • Sarah
    9 March 2013 at 6:27 pm

    Thank you so much for expressing what my heart is feeling. I have two boys(5 & 4), and if I had not paid attention to the names of your sons I would have thought you had been looking in through the windows of our home(had you been able to dig through all the snow to see in). We may be on opposite sides of the world but being a mom and struggling to love our children the way God desires is the same. Blessing to you, thank you for sharing. (We are also expecting our third Oct 3rd….shhhh we have not told anyone yet, enjoying this sweet one all to our selves for the moment)

    Reply
  • […] finally, I woke up to this piece this morning.  Adriel spoke exactly to wear my heart is right now. I have the same moments of frustration, […]

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