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Bloggers

Meet the Faith & Family bloggers. We invite you to join us in encouraging and helping the Faith & Family community grow in faith!

Danielle Bean

Danielle Bean
Danielle Bean, a mother of eight, is editor-in-chief of Catholic Digest and Faith & Family. She is author of My Cup of Tea, Mom to Mom, Day to Day, and most recently Small Steps for Catholic Moms. Though she once struggled to separate her life and her …
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Rachel Balducci

Rachel Balducci
Rachel Balducci is married to Paul and they are the parents of five lively boys and one precious baby girl. She is the author of How Do You Tuck In A Superhero?, and is a newspaper columnist for the Diocese of Savannah, Georgia. For the past four years, she has …
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Lisa Hendey

Lisa Hendey
Lisa Hendey is the founder and editor of CatholicMom.com and the author of A Book of Saints for Catholic Moms and The Handbook for Catholic Moms. Lisa is also enjoys speaking around the country, is employed as webmaster for her parish web sites and spends time on various …
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Arwen Mosher

Arwen Mosher
Arwen Mosher lives in southeastern Michigan with her husband Bryan and their 4-year-old daughter, 2-year-old son, and twin boys born May 2011. She has a bachelor's degree in theology. She dreads laundry, craves sleep, loves to read novels and do logic puzzles, and can't live without tea. Her personal blog site …
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Rebecca Teti

Rebecca Teti
Rebecca Teti is married to Dennis and has four children (3 boys, 1 girl) who -- like yours no doubt -- are pious and kind, gorgeous, and can spin flax into gold. A Washington, DC, native, she converted to Catholicism while an undergrad at the U. Dallas, where she double-majored in …
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Robyn Lee

Robyn Lee
Robyn Lee is a 30-something, single lady, living in Connecticut in a small bungalow-style kit house built by her great uncle in the 1950s. She also conveniently lives next door to her sister, brother-in-law and six kids ... and two doors down are her parents. She received her undergraduate degree from …
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DariaSockey

DariaSockey
Daria Sockey is a freelance writer and veteran of the large family/homeschooling scene. She recently returned home from a three-year experiment in full time outside employment. (Hallelujah!) Daria authored several of the original Faith&Life Catechetical Series student texts (Ignatius Press), and is currently a Senior Writer for Faith&Family magazine. A latecomer …
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Guest Bloggers

Kate Lloyd

Kate Lloyd
Kate Lloyd is a rising senior, and a political science major at Thomas More College of Liberal Arts in New Hampshire. While not in school, she lives in Whitehall PA, with her mom, dad, five sisters and little brother. She needs someone to write a piece about how it's possible to …
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Lynn Wehner

Lynn Wehner
As a wife and mother, writer and speaker, Lynn Wehner challenges others to see the blessings that flow when we struggle to say "Yes" to God’s call. Control freak extraordinaire, she is adept at informing God of her brilliant plans and then wondering why the heck they never turn out that …
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Peace Be With Me

More Quiet, Less Grinch

“Oh, the noise! Oh, the noise! Noise! Noise! Noise! That’s one thing he hated! The NOISE! NOISE! NOISE! NOISE!” Dr. Seuss’s The Grinch Who Stole Christmas

Mr. Grinch, you and me both.

It may very well be the most wonderful time of the year, but it’s also the nosiest. All is not calm, as much as I had hoped it would be. All is not quiet. There’s so much busyness even though I’m militant about keeping organized and say no to multiple holiday events. Nor do I have unrealistic expectations. My house does not look like a Winter Wonderland, and don’t let the Christmas card fool you: Digital cameras allow parents to catch the nanosecond moment when their children are cherubic pictures of perfection cloaked in hand-pressed red velvet (and if you don’t get lucky, there’s always Photoshop). 

But no matter how hard I try, I always have trouble finding peace during Advent. Since my entry into motherhood, Lent is an easier liturgical season for me. There’s something comforting about its starkness. There are temptations to be sure during the 40 days of Lent, but there aren’t nearly as many distractions. 

The weeks leading up to Christmas, on the other hand, are noisy, flashy. 

I’m really not a Scrooge. I love my children’s effusion of joy, the magic of the season, and the sparkling lights.  In fact, ever since we were newlyweds my husband and I enjoy scouting out the local neighborhoods to find and admire the house with the most over-the-top decorations.

There’s nothing wrong with the festooning. All the Christmas extravagance is a good reminder that when Jesus was born, angels sang, trumpets blared, and that all the “noise” of the season is a way to “repeat the sounding joy” for the birth of our Savior.

But lately it’s been getting to me - not the joy but the clamorous Christmas soundtrack candy cane-fueled children provide. (Please, postal workers, nice lady at the grocery store, Salvation Army bell ringer, and everybody else on the planet, no more candy for the kids, okay?)

Everywhere I turn there are children smacking lips while licking fingers sticky with frosting. There are children ringing bells and children singing and giggling and squabbling, too. There are theatrical meltdowns. There are so many questions: “How many more days until Christmas?” “Can I have one more cookie? Please?  PLEASE!” “Why?” “Why?” and “Why?” again.

Sometimes I welcome the queries and the tender requests. It’s easy to pause for a child who wants to curl onto your lap for another story. It’s not so easy to silence the din of whining or screaming over who gets to open the window of the Advent calendar for that day.

As a matter of survival, I look for small pockets of quiet to fold myself into every day. I creep away when I think my children are engrossed with their playthings, but their Momdar is sensitive, their Mom Positioning System units are very accurate. And it’s not long before they find me.

So I make a goal to wake up early. But they wake up earlier.

The next morning comes. I nurse the baby and savor the darkness and the stillness of my cathedraled calm.  I’m tired, but I decide to wake up once the baby falls limp against me while the rest of the world is asleep. I’m tired, but I know waking up before the sky is filled with the pink glow of dawn will fill me more than an hour or two of fragmented sleep will. I sneak downstairs.  Only minutes later, they arise, too, and it isn’t a pitter patter of soft feet that find me, but thunderous stomps down the stairs.

I greet them, the little, chirping, morning larks, and serve them breakfast. Then I hand them a rainbow of crayons and a stack of coloring books, and I plan my escape.

While their hands are occupied, I steal away to my secret hiding place: The bathroom. I cannot count the number of times I have locked the door and sat on the toilet lid to pray or to write or to read books with titles like When Your Child Drives You Crazy all under the guise of suffering from a stubborn case of constipation.

On this day, when I leave my cloistered peace after one child pounds on the door and says, “Mommy, are you finished yet? Sally* did something bad,” I find the (toddler’s) writing (scribbling) is on the wall.  (*I’m protecting the name of the guilty party.)

It won’t come off. She already tried to color over the black slashes with a white crayon (pretty clever, I must say).  She’s contrite. “I sowry,” she says. Then, “It won’t happen again.”

My child is forgiven and whatever I had been doing in the bathroom forgotten.  I’m back in the trenches, and my children are asking if they can make another Christmas card for their grandparents.

Later when it’s our daily quiet time and my toddler is crying because she can’t find her lovey and an older child asks me if I’m going to the bathroom again (I think she’s on to me) I’m reminded that just as the apostles would run to find Jesus when He sought solitude, my children will find me. They will wake me, as the apostles awoke Jesus, when a storm begins to brew.

I’ll never stop trying to find the quiet, especially during Advent when we’re supposed to see past the holiday hoopla, the mass commercialism, the singsongy, overly synchronized Simply-Having-A-Wonderful-Christmastime-kind-of-vapid-lyrics (Paul McCartney, why, oh, why?), the chronic case of the gimmes that begin to plague children before the Thanksgiving leftovers are consumed, and find Christ, hidden and quiet, lying in a dusty manger and tucked away in the dusty corners of my heart.

Christ is calm. He is quiet. But sometimes I have to find Him in all the commotion. The angel’s proclamation, “Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace” wasn’t referring to peace among men - or peace in your household and with your children - but peace with God.

Silence is golden; it’s also scarce when you’re a busy mom, even more so during the Advent season. But God is not in limited supply. He doesn’t need silence to work in our lives. He is everywhere, and He is sufficient. All He needs more than a perfect contemplative silence, as nice as that would be, is our awareness. The awareness that His peace is within me, and I don’t have to escape to the bathroom to find it.

—Kate Wicker is the author of Weightless: Making Peace With Your Body. Find her online at KateWicker.com.


Comments

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“While their hands are occupied, I steal away to my secret hiding place: The bathroom. I cannot count the number of times I have locked the door and sat on the toilet lid to pray or to write or to read books with titles like When Your Child Drives You Crazy all under the guise of suffering from a stubborn case of constipation.”

This is hysterical and incredibly genius - I have to remember this once I have kids old enough to attend to younger ones! smile  Great post!

 

while I adore Christmas, I do not adore the emphasis of craziness that many put on that day.  i often keep the tv off to prevent the ‘i want that’ syndrome or the ‘can i get that’ fever.  that and it is a hard and fast custom in our house that we stay home and invite family to visit us (we’re way out of the way for both families so it doesn’t happen often that someone takes us up on the offer).  this one custom actually cut down on the crazy ‘need’ to drive from one family to the other family to shove in quality time. 

by the by, it also warms my heart to know that the bathroom is other peoples’ place of refuge from their children when five minutes of quiet seems like asking for someone to find the end of pi.

 

Be careful. After a few years too many trips to the bathroom prompts my older ones to ask if I’m pregnant :D
I also retreat to the bathroom. The master bath. The one that has two locked doors and a loud fan between me and the troops.

 

Love the reflection about Jesus seeking solitude and the apostles running to him!

 

I’m struggling a bit with this now too: finding the quiet amidst the “noise” and finding Jesus in the commotion.  And my “noise” is the typical, daily activities as you’ve described so well in the article. I also steel away to the bathroom for moments of quiet and my kids’ also have that finely tuned Mommy radar.  The comment about finding Lent a bit easier because of its starkness is true for me as well - reflecting on that the other day as I sat in the bathroom:).  Thank you for this, the reminder that Jesus is there, even in the commotion.

 

I do really appreciate this site. It shows me different perspective and lessons in life that all of us will be inspired of.Thank you and God bless!!
dancing with stars contestants


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