Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Sleeping Babies

I'm sure you're familiar with the phrase, "never wake a sleeping baby."  In this house, we pretty much live by that standard even if it means giving up something that I was planning to do.  Honestly, it's for my own sanity and not much is worse than Jake's mood after waking up "poorly" from a nap.  To put it nicely, he's a grouch.  Naptime is a glorious thing around here.  Surprisingly, since day one, both kids tend to sleep during the same time each afternoon so I actually get a few minutes of quiet here and there.  Granted, it comes with a side of stress as I am constantly aware that my coveted quiet time could come to an end at any moment.  And I have to be very careful with my mood when they wake up.  I find that at times I get frustrated that they wake up too soon, when I'm in the middle of something, as if it's their fault.  It's terrible really, and I try my best to remind myself that they aren't on my schedule, but I should be sensitive to theirs.  And then again, I remind myself that this time is not my own anyway, but time that God is lending to me for awhile, as I mentioned in my post about being busy.  My children are precious, asleep or awake, and I just have to remember that some women would give their left arm to have what we have and love them both as if I could lose them at any moment.

On a trip to North Carolina, I looked back at Jake who was sleeping in his carseat.  We had had a truly rough day.  The trip should have been about seven hours total and we were well into hour ten.  We had already gotten a speeding ticket, two diaper blow-outs from Lilly, and our GPS got us lost on back roads that were unpaved and one-lane wide.  Because they were windy, Jake had gotten car sick twice and there was no where to stop to clean him up other than the side of the road in the freezing cold.  At one point I began laughing hysterically (I'm pretty sure it was when we got lost) and Josh probably thought that I was losing it.  Truth is, I kind of was losing it.  My only other option was to cry, so laughing seemed appropriate.  The best part was when Josh asked me to grab the Atlas from the back of the car.  It wasn't until I had it open that I realized how absurd this request was... surely an unpaved road in Deliverance would not be in the national Atlas... and it wasn't.  But I digress...

As I looked back at my sweet baby boy, eyes closed, mouth agape, I said, almost to myself, "He's so beautiful."  Yes, boys can be beautiful.   They grow up to be handsome, but as toddlers, their sweet little features like long eyelashes, chubby cheeks, and pouty lips make "beautiful" a more appropriate word.  "You always say that when he's sleeping," Josh replied with a little laugh.  Hmm... I hadn't thought of that before, but he was right.  And come to think of it, I say that to myself every time I stare at one of my children while they are sleeping.  As busy as Jake is, when he is sleeping it's the only time I really get to look at him.  Sure, I see him all day long, but when he is asleep, he's finally still enough for me to study every feature of his face, the face that I helped make.  And more than just realizing that he truly is a beautiful boy, I realize how in awe of him I am.  Of how he is the product of something we created.  He and Lilly are by far the two greatest things I have ever done, and that, my friends, is beautiful to me.

As I reflected back on Josh's comment a couple of days later, I started to think that God probably feels the same way about us.  Sometimes we get so busy that we run around and all He sees is a blur.  The blur He created.  We don't stop long enough to even acknowledge Him, sometimes for days at a time.  We get so wrapped up in going here and there, from one activity or appointment to another, and we rarely stop long enough for Him to sit and stare at us.  Even if the running around is to do His work... we sometimes do it without even remembering to stop for a moment and thank our Father.  I know that when I think of my God, I am in awe of all that He has created and done, but have you ever thought that maybe He looks at us like that, too?  Perhaps when we sit still long enough, or perhaps when we're sleeping since we rarely stop when we're awake, perhaps He sits back and studies our faces, the very faces that He created.  And even though He has done plenty of impressive things, He is in awe of that face He created.  He is in awe of its beauty and of every feature.  Yes, my friends, He is in awe of... YOU!


I know not all of you have sleeping babies to sit and stare at right now in your lives, but today as you go about your hectic day, I challenge you to just stop for a moment and breathe in all that you are and were created to be.  Stop and thank the God who created you, for giving you every last feature, talent, and attribute.  And when you look to the sky and feel the warmth of the sunshine on your face, close your eyes like a sleeping baby and know that God is smiling down on you, in awe of your beauty.  He, after all, adores YOU more than we mothers adore our own children.  I cannot even wrap my mind around that kind of love. 



2 comments:

  1. Beautiful. It was a great revelation to me not long ago when I found myself wondering if God scoffed at my hurried thought of him (like he thought "too little, too late" or something) and I realized that he would reject that moment no more than a parent with an obnoxious, too-cool-for-you teen would reject a rare moment when their child stopped and said, "hey mom, I love you."

    And I totally identify with the joint joy and stress of naptime. It's so great, but you live in fear of it ending at any moment. Sunday, I was trying to keep Claire from crying and waking Kate from her nap--you would have thought we were in Anne Frank's attic from the way I was shushing that baby!

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  2. We're like that here, too. You don't want want to see what I'll turn into if you wake up my sleeping baby! Haha! Glad I'm not the only one who stresses about when my kids will be waking up!

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