My name is Sarah, but my penchant for crafts and meticulous,
obsessive creative streak has earned me the nickname “Little Martha.” Martha
Stewart used to appeal to me in so many ways: she seemed to be a strong,
independent woman whose home was always just-so. Prepared to whip up a French
petit four or German chocolate cake at the drop of a hat, constantly ready to
entertain a guest of one or one hundred, able to carve masterpieces into
gourds? Genius!
But over the last year or so, as I’ve grown and changed in
my perspectives on parenting, and on what’s really important to me in my life,
I’ve started to really resent the nickname “Little Martha.” Where I used to
admire her, I now look on her as incredibly superficial…selfish…self-centered.
I’ve been
bugged by the question: who was she really doing all that crafting and
hostessing for anyways? I still love to see all the crafts and clever things she
can do, but I wonder why she bothers? What’s her goal? Who is she doing this
work for?
I love to work with my hands, I enjoy making things, and the
part about crafting that brings me the most joy is being able to give the
things I make away to my family and friends. Handmade gifting makes my heart
happy…being able to do use the gifts I’ve been given to do something that helps
someone else fills my cup. This is true across the board in my life: whether it’s
teaching, mentoring other teachers, writing, crafting, caring for children, I
feel as though the tasks I’m engaged in are meaningful because I’ve been called
to serve in these ways.
Which is why this picture, taken by my three-year-old son,
gave me pause.
He was using my phone to take pictures of things around the
house that he thought were important- he snapped and giggled for almost ten
minutes before returning my phone and running off to play cars. As I scrolled
through his snapshots after he went to bed, I found it so telling to see the
world from his short-legged perspective, to review the things he felt to be
meaningful enough to steady his little hands and click the button: a half-eaten
cookie, his sister’s painted toenails, his pile of dinosaurs, his Daddy in the
kitchen, his barely-able-to-see-over-the-counter shot of the art supplies…and
this. Mommy, hunched over computer, coffee cradled, busy at work.
This one stopped me.
Is this how they see me?
There is always the guilt, even in working from home: every
minute spent on a work or home or any task other than engaging in the moment
with them…am I missing something precious? Will my children remember the
moments spent with them, or lament the times I was “busy” doing something else?
There is no doubt that, no matter how I craft my schedule each day, there are
times when I have to do things that do not directly involve them. I am ok with
that, I really am. But then pictures like this make me think: what was I
working on right then? Was it a necessary action at that moment, or was I
distracted from what was really important right then? Was it child or work-related,
or Pinterest-related? Was I serving my children, serving others, and serving God
at that moment…or was I distracted by my own interests?
The story of Mary and Martha in Luke 10:38 has been on my
mind quite a bit lately, and this photo from a three-year-old’s perspective
really drives it home:
In this photograph, am I Mary, or am I still playing Little Martha?
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