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My belly swollen with child number 3, I sat amidst dirty
laundry piles and wondered what happened to my dreams. While being a
stay-at-home mom had always been on the list of plans for my life, I'd
thought I could do it all. As a college student, dreaming of my future,
I'd worked it out. I'd teach elementary school for a few years (which I
did), get married and have children (check), and then, while staying at
home with my kids, I'd craft a great American novel during naptime.
Staring at all those laundry piles, tired from the demands of pregnancy,
I realized nobody ever told me that naptime meant the sleep-deprived mom
would either force herself through a list of undone chores, or fall
exhausted into bed herself! My idealistic goals for my life seemed to
dance in front of my eyes, laughing at my naiveté. To become a writer
while staying at home with my children seemed an unrealistic daydream.
And now on top of that, my husband wanted me to homeschool our children.
Though we'd planned to homeschool since the early days of our
engagement, at that moment the sacrifice seemed to great. Our oldest was
ready to start kindergarten and the reality of sixteen years of hard
work loomed before me.
I'd told my husband we needed to rethink our plan, that I could barely
keep up with the children's needs and didn't know how I could homeschool
on top of a new baby. I suggested we check other options. These concerns
were all real, but in my heart of hearts, much of my struggle to begin
homeschooling was an unwillingness to continue to sacrifice my dreams. I
had now lived the reality of motherhood and wondered if I could really
take another step into my children's world. Six hours of alone time each
weekday while my children attended school away from home enticed me. I
imagined quiet days--hours when I could release my creative muse and
embrace my dreams.
I'd been playing with writing. Poetry and articles for women's magazines
sat untouched on my computer. I believed owning a printer might give me
the tool I needed to start submitting my work. Knowing we couldn't
afford to buy one, I'd been asking God to supply it.
But now, it felt like a choice. Send my daughter to school, and when her
brothers were old enough to join her, I could write. Or, keep her home
and put my life off for another sixteen years.
For a while, my husband was unbending. He was convinced homeschooling
was the best choice for our children and that I could handle it.
Finally, after listening to my woes, he suggested we begin to examine
other options. In that moment, I knew the issue was really about
obedience. Could I let go of my dreams and obey what I'd always known
God had called me to do with my children? Or would I push away the
Father's prompting and chase after my own agenda?
I quietly admitted to my husband what I'd known all along. The Lord
wanted us to homeschool our children and I needed to follow His
direction.
About this time, the washing machine broke down. The dirty laundry piles
multiplied and shoving aside any writing dreams I prayed fervently for a
washer. I'll never forget where I was when the call came. I sat on the
bottom step of our stairs, looking at all the laundry that needed to be
washed. A friend said me she had something she felt the Lord had told
her to give me. I was sure it was a washing machine.
It was a printer.
I hung up the phone and fiddled with another laundry pile, processing
what had just happened. I felt the Lord whisper, "I know your dreams
don't end in laundry piles. I gave you those dreams." It was as if the
Lord was showing me that as I followed Him in obedience and homeschooled
my children, He was going to take care of the rest.
For the next several years I wrote very little, other than in my journal
and annual holiday letter. Another little boy came quickly on the heels
of the baby I'd been carrying when I decided to homeschool. I was thrust
again into a world of diapers, sleepless nights, and bath time. Somehow,
the older two children learned to read, write, add and subtract, while I
nursed little ones. It all seems rather miraculous looking back--that
school happened in our house as babies were nurtured and toddlers
chased. Eventually, everyone was potty-trained, dressing himself, and
tying his shoes.
And then one day, seven years or so after the day the Lord gave me a
printer, I sat down at my computer and started writing. I kept writing
in stolen moments--when my husband took all four children to baseball
practice, or after the children were asleep. And before I knew it, I had
written my first book. I began attending writing conferences and a
critique group. Opportunities to share my writing came.
And through it all, we homeschooled.
The oldest entered highschool. The little ones, too, learned to read and
write--and today, we continue. I shuttle the kids to hockey, debate
competition, and Boy Scouts. We read books and crunch numbers.
I write when the Lord gives me the time and I walk through whatever
writing doors He opens before me. Today, I write from the wealth of
experiences and spiritual growth He gives me while I homeschool. And I
trust Him with the future.
I'm learning an important truth: God is the keeper of a mother's dreams.
He is the only one who knows how to weave her unique talents and gifts
into the landscape of her mothering. He knows the seasons she can reach
beyond her family, and the seasons she can't. And He will bring into
fullness the dreams He has placed within her in His time and His way.
All the Lord brings her through as she is obedient to the call to her
children will provide training and a deepening of character that will
translate into her other gifts and callings.
Our God can be trusted to take good care of the dreams He has given us.
When we lay down our personal goals and sacrifice our time choosing to
pour into the lives of our children, we aren't leaving our dreams in the
dust. We are simply placing them in the Father's hand and giving Him
permission to shape them as He sees fit.

A home schooling mother of four, Paula Moldenhauer is passionate about
God's grace and intimacy with Jesus. Her website offers home schooling
hints, book reviews, and a free weekly devotional, Soul Scents.
Subscribe to Soul Scents at
www.soulscents.us. You can contact
Paula at
Paula@soulscents.us.
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