MOMENTS
FOR MUM
with
Elisabeth Corcoran
The other day I asked my 7-year-old daughter, Sara, if she was out of glue
as I was making a shopping list.
She said she was.
I asked if she preferred a bottle of glue or glue sticks. She said glue sticks,
so I jotted it down and ran some errands that evening. I came home after the
kids were in bed, so I placed her glue sticks and some drawing paper that I
bought for her on her desk with a sticky note that said simply: Sara,
I love you. Mommy.
I thought for sure she would be pleasantly surprised and at least mention the
gifts in the morning, if not say thank you. Instead, I had to ask her if she
saw what I had left her. Without saying anything, she went in her room and
brought out the note I had left for her. This is what she had written on the
back:
"I do not love you too.
p.s. becus the glue sticks aer for school!"
(meaning, I shouldn't be considering this a gift since its a school supply
and not for pleasure!)
I was blown away. Its one thing for a child, in the heat of the moment,
to yell I hate you! (which thankfully my kids have not done yet).
Its quite another to intentionally write the words I do not love
you. A little bit of my heart broke in that moment. I was crushed. (And
not the kind of crushed that Sara refers to when she talks about her boyfriend and
them being crushed on each other.)
I found myself unable to speak to her in those few minutes before taking her
to school. I was hurt. I was shocked by her ingratitude. But then I did try
to give myself a pep talk by reminding myself that she is still just a child.
Those words did not come from a fully mature adult who should know better.
They came from a little girl who knows honesty above tact, and real feelings
above putting on a mask. But that reminded me of an incident a couple of weeks
before.
Because a couple of weeks ago, I was subject to Matthew 18 three times in
under five days. If you’re not familiar with Matthew 18, allow me to
quote from verse 15: ?If your brother sins against you, go and show him his
fault, just between the two of you. If he listens to you, you have won your
brother over.?
Three people saw things in me that needed to be corrected. One handled it well
beautifully
and sensitively, actually. So well, that I owned up to my errors and vowed
to work on those areas. Another handled it, and my heart, with general carelessness
but
unfortunately, I have gotten used to that kind of treatment from that person
so
my skin is a bit thicker when it comes to that individual.
And the third
well, part of the rebuke was that I can be difficult to
work with. To be honest, I was thinking: 'and your point is ... ?' Nothing
new there - I have high standards, what can I say? The other part this
person said I can be insincere. That cut to my core
mainly because authenticity
is what I admire most in my closest friends, and authenticity is what I strive
for in my relationships.
I cant stand people who seem fake, who put on airs, who put people down
to build themselves up, who dont mean what they say, who are artificial
and hypocritical. And that is what I was just told that I was.
I have wrestled with that conversation. With the word insincere being
my new moniker. For weeks. I keep trying to give it over to God. Part of me
thinks: this person told me shes been thinking about this for a
year now. She told me shes been praying about how to talk to me. I have
to give her and her assessment due credit.
And another part of me thinks: shes a sinner too. This judgment
did not come straight from the lips of God, it came from another human being.
I realized that with my closest circle of friends, I am about as genuine, real
and lay-it-all-out-on-the-table as I can get. But I also realized that with
women who dont know me well, and whom I dont know well, I may have
a guard up over my heart. Ive been hurt in the not-so-distant past, and
I have placed a band of emotional soldiers up to keep out those who might come
to steal and destroy. To those people, I may seem insincere. So I came to the
conclusion that I needed to give it proper weight. Not too little, not too
much.
I can be so sensitive. But Im probably not alone. Who likes to have someone
walk up to them and start rattling off their faults? Id wager just about
no one. We will all probably have someone quote Matthew 18 to us in the future.
We need to be open to other peoples thoughts, even constructive criticisms.
But we also need to be very discerning, not to let everything anyone says about
us shut us down or mould our thinking about ourselves. We need to test it against
what God says of us.
Do you have peoples words floating around in your head? Something someone
has said to you that you cant shake? Something that has hurt you, left
you questioning yourself?
When that happens, and I dont say this lightly or as if its a quick
fix, but - bring it to God. He knows youre hurting. He holds your true
assessment. Let him tell you who you are and what is good and true about you.
He loves you completely.
And thats really the only thing you need to dwell on.
- Elisabeth
K. Corcoran is the author of Calm in My Chaos: Encouragement
for a Moms Weary Soul. She is wife to Kevin, and mum
to Sara, 7, and Jack, 5. Her passion is encouraging women and
she fulfills that through heading up the Womens Ministries
on staff at Blackberry Creek Community Church in Aurora, Illinois,
and writing and speaking as much as she can. Calm in My Chaos
(2001) can be purchased through amazon.com. This column is original
and not excerpted from her book.
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