
Not my son's real room
These are the questions that occurred to me this past Monday during our “chore” time. Mondays are hard. We have come and gone and played all weekend. Things have been ignored, which is fine. I am one to believe a house should be lived in. I am one to believe that over kill on cleanliness is too much pressure, too much angst, causing way too much misery. Sometimes you just have to live and clean later. This is our Mondays-the clean later!
So, the first order of the day is their rooms. I know they are their rooms. I do. I also know it is MY house and they live under it. I know that I have to pick my battles, I do. BUT this is one battle I can’t quite figure out how a godly mother is to tackle it! I told them all to please pick up their clothes-the clean ones in piles on their dresser, the dirty ones on the floor, and the questionable ones hanging off of dressers and hooks etc…Monday and Friday are laundry days. I do ALL laundry on Monday and Friday. I instructed them to please pick up their rooms FIRST before moving on to their weekly assigned daily chore.
When they all left their bedrooms as quickly as they did, I knew it wasn’t good. I called one back. I called another back. I went further into the rooms and discovered clothes in corners, thrown there to keep from being seen, maybe? Maybe not. Maybe they were just missed because not one child truly had their heart in the chore. Minimal effort is always the name of the game when it comes to keeping their clothes in order and their rooms clean. So, what is a mother to do?
I will tell you that it creates in me a very wrathful spirit. I work hard. There is a lot on my plate every day. And while they do have chores, for the most part their effort daily and the work I require from them day in and day out is pretty light-pretty light indeed. So is it a problem to persevere in and be solved? Is it simply the nature of the beast that is teenagers, and I should let it go? Or is it a colossal failure on my part as a mother that I have sons who do not do everything as unto the Lord and not as unto men? What is a mother to do? Really! If you know please tell me.
I end up feeling abused, unappreciated, unloved, and taken for granted. I get very angry inside and fight a feeling of walking out on the whole lot of them! How’s that for godly motherhood emotions? Yeah. I am being VERY real here. I do. I want to walk out the door, catch a bite to eat somewhere, catch a movie, and leave them to tend to themselves- something I am sure they would love and they would not truly miss all my work and ministrations for days and days to come! So if I think that leaving them is some sort of painful lesson for them to learn, well it would be long time in coming. But I weary. I weary. I weary in well doing. I weary in teaching and instructing and rearing up godly men. I just want to throw up my arms and say, “Who cares?” The thing is; I care.
Why? I truly don’t know, but I do. And messy rooms with clothes all over the floor make me edgy, nervous, irritable, and not as joyful as I could be! That is the fact of the matter. I wish it were different. I wish I could ignore the mess, but truth is I can’t! I DO sometimes go down the hall, peer into the pits, see the mess, give a heavy sigh and simply close the door. I do that A LOT actually. Sometimes you just don’t have the energy, the chutzpah to deal with it! Sometimes you just know that today isn’t the day to pick this battle. So you let it go. I think to myself of the parents who have lost their children and would long to have this problem to deal with. I thank the Lord for my sons and ask forgiveness for my murmurings and complaining. I truly do that more times than not. THEN there are days, like this other Monday morning, and well, let’s say I don’t do that!
So what did I do? I called them all into a bedroom. I told them up front that I truly didn’t know what to do. I told them that I struggled with understanding if it is the nature of the beast that is teens, or a problem to solve, or a failure on my part; but that I knew I couldn’t handle it any longer. I told them that when they have their OWN house they can live like slobs all they want, but for now while they are under my roof they must, they MUST take better care of their rooms. I told them I didn’t think I was asking too much for each son to pick up after himself; and that if they would do JUST that they would find that there isn’t a lot of work to do.
I have no idea what went through their minds. I could see on their faces that they couldn’t wait for me to stop talking so they could just get their rooms in order and be done with it! Why they didn’t the first THREE times I asked for it to be done, I don’t know. There. You have my darkest confession about the true state of our home. I often have to ask my sons to do something not once, not twice, but three times before it is done correctly. Yep. It’s true! How much easier was it when they were toddlers to simply have them reciting our little saying? “How do we obey?” “Right away, all the way, and in a happy way.” Then they would do what I told them and that would be the end of it.
Oh well. This too shall pass. Did I figure it out? Not really. I still am not sure if it is a failure on my part, a problem to be fixed, or simply the nature of teens that I should accept and not battle. It depends on the day I suppose. How’s that for consistency in parenting?! I am just doing the best I can. I am thankful for their presence and all too soon they will be gone. I try to take deep breaths and remember that. AND thankfully, I know that when I am weak, then I am strong. Thankfully, I know that His power is made perfect in my weakness. Thankfully, in the grand scheme of things it’s just a bunch of dirty clothes in a messy room! But some days it seems so much bigger than that! LOL!


13 comments:
I so get you! I hate mess, I do let some things go and am more chilled than I used to be, but it makes me feel like my mind is in a mess if everything around me is crazy. I don't have teenagers yet, so will cross that bridge when it comes...these autumn school holidays I've let my son do his thing in his room, saying to myself - it's his room, give him his space, don't be too tidy on him (talking to myself here because I so want to dive in and sort it out), well he is only 7 but he's been really tidy of his own accord - thank you lord, now my daughter, miss almost 5 is the untidiest critter with toys and belongings appearing in a huge mess in room after room, and getting her to tidy up is a mission, have to keep asking, asking, then it's getting more loud with the instruction...oh my. Today I was a happy bunny, I spent all morning cleaning all the bedrooms, changing beds, cleaning bathrooms, lots of laundry - not that the cleaning excites me, but everything was in order and it makes me feel totally that the next day is a new day, not me living in last week...does that make sense? Bless you heaps for being so real, I pray that there is a breakthrough on the tidy front and God's grace on you to sustain you.
Try not to stress too much over the mess, it is a teenager thing. They probely cannot find anything, if it is all straightened up. lol Hang in there sweet friend.
You too???? You forgot to mention "one of life's greatest mysteries" though. I only have one child, what does that make me? GASP! THUD! (Sorry, must have passed out!) hahahahahh Hey I know! Wanna come shopping with me?
What I appreciate about you the most is your honesty. I like that you don't "wear a mask".
Love the honesty, too. LOVE IT!
We all, as moms, wives, homeschoolers have similar struggles. My advice? make them do their own laundry (my 'musicman' does). And who said they were too big to recite, 'right away, all the way, in a happy way'? They're not. That is still how they should obey you.
Don't you even have 1 neat freak? 2out of my 5 are. Thank God. Yet, the other 3 are content to live in squalor. Oh, well.
Now, I must go scream at my children for the 14th time, to get out of bed! lol, just kidding. But they do have to clean their rooms before they can sleep over Gramma's (all of them) tonight.
~oh, praise God about the college issue, just read that one, too. Amazing. I love when we see our God answer those heartfelt prayers we have, even when our faith is small. Christian college- how awesome!~
Sigh....yes, I too share your life.
I remember when I was little Mom staying on top of us to keep our rooms clean.
I remember sitting on my son's bed to keep him on tract with the cleaning of his room. That was the only way it got done. THen he got into the pre teen and teen years and I would just shut the door.:0
Now I am going through this somewhat with Julia--but not as bad. She is much more into the detail. So when I tell her it is time to clean her room--it gets done without having to stand over her as much.
My Mother always said, People do what you inspect not what you expect.
I guess you could give us the title-Room Inspector! ;)
I would imagine that if our grandmothers had access to the internet you would have seen some of the same posts from them.:)
I struggle with this too. Usually, I say that they cannot do the fun thing until their room is clean. I've been making them keep them clean daily, which keeps the messes small. Thanks for sharing and being honest.
Kathi
Perhaps insisting that the rooms are picked up each night (or morning) will make Mondays easier to deal with. I recently posted this scripture in our kitchen:
Whatever you do, do it enthusiastically, as something done for the Lord and not for men. Colossians 3:23
This has applications for everyone in the house, and is an excellent way to facilitate a heart change in your boys. Not cleaning their room (although irritating to you) is not the core of the problem. They need to see that each thing they do should be filtered through the question, "Does this please (or glorify) or does this please (or glorify) God?"
Can you tell that I'm loving my new book on child rearing? LOL!
I'll be praying for you and your boys!
Xandra
It has been interesting reading all the suggestions and encouragement. I love sharing the daily struggles with other moms. Thanks for all your thoughts! I have tried it and done it all at one time or another. Here's the thing about teens who have been reared the way mine have been. They KNOW what I am going to say before I say it. I have gotten to all heart issues again and again. I have quoted the scriptures again and again. We have prayed, we have disciplined, we have done it all; and for the most part they are great guys. BUT I must learn to find the balance while I wait for God to do the work in their hearts. The foundation has been laid. They know what is glorifying to God. They know I expect obedience. They know. I can talk till I am blue in the face but it is God who spurs us on to to work and good deeds. I must be faithful to my task without wearying and alienating them by making too much of small matters yet not letting go too much either. Finding the balance...it is so different when you are dealing with mostly grown men...Thanks ladies!
Leslie - this is SO true! "They know. I can talk till I am blue in the face but it is God who spurs us on to to work and good deeds. I must be faithful to my task without wearying and alienating them by making too much of small matters yet not letting go too much either. Finding the balance...it is so different when you are dealing with mostly grown men"
This is my whole life right now, balance, balance, balance...and it is sooo very much a daily thing, sometimes even moment to moment. I guess at some seasons mroe than others, and for me this is DEFINITELY the season! :)
When you have trained them so thoroghly, so consistently (as you have) - it DOES become a heart issue - which you can't work out for them - only God can..., which puts you back to the day to day where to draw the line....
I think you are doing the best thing for your family...its just that the ACTUAL DOING of it DOES get so wearisome...I heart you!
Hang in there, Mom! :)
love ya!
Maria
I believe I could hear a echo of laughter from heaven this morning. I must have spent an hour (on and off) patiently explaining to Nathan the importance of cleaning his room.
He whined and he fussed. He made faces and produced a few tears. He did nothing immediately, completely or cheerfully. I quoted scripture and I reinforced the concept of obedience, and was met with a blank look and more whining.
In the end the room was clean, but a portion of my sanity was gone forever! (And he's only 7!) I took my own advice and the results were less than stellar...LOL! I had to keep praying for patience and guidence in beteween each encounter.
Heaven help us all!
Xandra
Hi:
Thanks for participating in this week's Carnival of Family Life, hosted by Jen at Diary of 1. Be sure to drop by tomorrow, April 28, 2008, and check out some of the many wonderful articles submitted this week!
JHS
Colloquium
Hello, I actually complained so much about this issue my poor husband took it over. When he goes in their room to put them to bed at night if there is one thing on the floor they have no TV or computer the next day. He is firm and consistant. He has them vaccuum every Monday or the same punishment of no TV or computer. Needless to say their rooms are cleaner than mine. And I have no stress with this issue. I realize this is not for everyone but it works here...Now if I could get them to stop eating so much...
My kids are 10 (girl) and 12(boy) by the way. and Lizzie is the one that has the hardest time keeping her room clean. (like her mom)
I wish I knew the answer! I have the same problem here. And I hear you loud and clear about how they already know what to do. That's the frustrating part to me. I have started grounding them the next day from the computer if they leave a mess. I always thought that was lame and that if I did my job I would not have to resort to grounding, but alas, here I am.
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