Balance.
If there’s one word I struggle with the most, it’s “Balance”.
I have come to the conclusion, after years of searching through sweaty palms and skyrocketing pulse rates, that there is absolutely, undeniably, no such thing.
As balance.
Do you know ANY mom who has her days perfectly planned and executed with predictable pursuits?
Our lives are in a constant state of UN-balance. Parenting is not predictable. When you have kids, you officially enter the Casino of Kid Rearing, where you will spend your days throwing the dice to see what kind of day you’re going to get. No one ever knows.
It simply is what it is.
As I sit here writing this, I am actively neglecting all the other areas of my life in desperate need of my attention. My house is a disaster, my basement floor is flooded with dirty laundry, and my kids are hungry, constantly bickering, and demanding my attention. I have a birthday party to plan, a cake to bake, and the school forms have piled up along with countless other to-dos on my list. I will probably get one or two things accomplished before the day is over, leaving several other things in the dust.
Let’s just hope the kids get fed.
Us moms have developed the fine art of managing the constant chaotic life of raising kids, working, maintaining relationships, and developing new pursuits outside of our homes.
I don’t know about you, but I have yet to master this juggling act. One ball rises in the air as the others fall to the ground. I look at the balls that landed on the ground and shake my head.
Every single day.
One morning, I stood at my kitchen counter, staring at my ridiculous scribbled list highlighting all the sorely neglected areas of my teetering, UN-balanced life. My palms got sweaty and my pulse began to quicken as I felt overwhelmed to the point of paralysis.
That’s when it hit me. I must stop this agonizing battle for balance. I will never ever ever ever live a balanced life. Countless speeches, books, podcasts, and articles instruct us on finding balance in our busy lives, and how balance will bring a person sanity and peace. This expectation – this phenomenon of trying to achieve an impossible goal, to long for this unattainable fallacy – does nothing but stress us all out more.
How do moms live a balanced life?
They don’t.
So THIS is my new goal:
To live in the state of UN-balance and actually be OKAY WITH IT. To not feel like a failure from the constant slathering of “You need balance in your life!” coming from all the well-meaning, charismatic coaches and mindful mentors who claim this is the key to happiness.
Every single day, things will be sacrificed to free me up to follow through on other things. The needs of our children rise and fall in no predictable pattern, and we must be flexible enough to bend our plans to meet them. The scale will be off, the pie chart will never be evenly split, nor does it need to be.
Life is unpredictable, kids are unpredictable. Likewise, parenting will never be predictable or nicely tucked into a neat package of orderly balance.
Often, when my world tilts way off its axis, it means I’m really living, with a passion that naturally releases my grasp on the reigns of control. When a riptide pulls me away from the steady current of life’s best-laid plans, I experience some extraordinary moments – moments I never would have found had I clenched my teeth down hard on that ever-elusive “balance”.
If we spend our lives reaching, stretching, fighting to achieve that ideal, we’ll assume we’re not working hard enough. If we spend our lives believing that balance brings peace and prosperity, we’ll feel like failures because our slippery, sweaty mothering hands can’t grasp it…
And then we’ll have completely missed out on the true ebb and flow of life.
That’s where the good stuff happens, where parenting is at its finest.
I know.
And I’m willing to bet, you really do, too.
This was first published on Motherly.
Off to check it out!
Heading over!
I believe that we all have our definition of Balance Chris. And that being unbalanced does not mean that we are missing something or that we are not good enough, it simply means that we do our best and that’s ok.
We’d love, as women, as mothers, to control everything. But when we do we are missing the most important part of Life – enjoying it!
Love your views on the subject. Thanks for sharing in such a unique way and helping many women on the road.
Take care. Sending you love from Paris.
Balance is the ultimate. In every part of our life. Balanced diet. Moderation etc. my birth sign are the scales—the symbol of balance. Always something to strive for, Chris. I will check out your article.
Yes balance is like the center of life, isn’t it? I’m still not there yet- but BUT the good stuff usually isn’t exactly in the center of life. I discover that every time I choose to shift my time to what matters most- and it usually lands somewhere on the fray. 🙂 Always challenging, but always rewarding too. Thanks so much for checking out my article, Lisa! Your support means the world to me!
A balanced life. Coveted by many. 😀
And achieved by few. LOL 😉
I used to say I was doing my best. But honestly, it was to make myself feel better because I was including things in my life that ultimately weren’t all that important. As I’ve started to get older, it’s become clearer to me what truly is important and I’m juggling less balls now and trying to spend more time on what truly matters to me. I don’t know that I will ever live a “balanced” life but I am getting closer to the point where I feel like I’m balancing my life better.
Michelle, your comment makes me SO happy! I feel like I have been living the SAME jam packed life as you! I’m so glad you too, are making adjustments according to what matters most. I’ve learned the same important lesson as I’ve gotten older. It’s still so hard for me to do. But it’s also SO much better, isn’t it? We can’t do it ALL.