What does it mean
to be a good mother?
Limits, but it’s also that tender balance of sweet
unconditional grace,
even total acceptance and then, the hard core follow through
that is so tough for me to do.
Rules, limits, follow through. You can’t let them
totally fail,
but falling down every once in a while, just a little
is a part of life. Skinned knees
no matter how much it hurts to watch must be okay, even good.
You will wipe the blood dripping, clean the gravel from their wounds,
place a band aid on their broken heart. Consequences are important.
But how to offer, even allow that
and also confirm, that no matter what
you are holding a safety net.
You want your kids to jump high, even fly
but then there’s the risk. They may fall, or even fail
or they may fly away.
That’s what it means
to be a good mother – to know the end of the story
is written before you
began with that first suck of life’s breast milk you offered, tender and sweet.
That one day they will go and that’s the aim you always knew,
to set them free.
Category: Motherhood {At-Home}
MOTHER [a poem about a parent aging]

Something shifted in the cosmos today as I became a giver, her One.
The one who thinks like a pastor, fondly listening inside to her heart which is lonely.
The one who touches like a nurse, open to the clues, simple hints about pain.
The one who creates food to share, serving the body and soul.
Daughter became caregiver to Mother.
And altered who I am.
Only, she isn’t frail, broken down or helpless — not just yet but it’s coming. Even so she asks and I answer, and I tag along. In case something is missed, she says.
Even so she still bails me out and listens as my heart bursts open, pooling over the edges of my day. The “middle school” years, I am tender, raw with anguish.
Oh yes, she is still Mother, but today something in the cosmos shifted, and I became a Giver.
I became her One.
MHH
Other Poems.
- In the Space of Days I Grew Up
- What Kind of a Mother Is She?
- Going Quietly Sane (A Collection of my poetry, more than 100+)
EATING ANIMALS by Jonathan Safran Foer
For the last two weeks I have been enjoying life meat free. I never thought that was possible. Here’s why I no longer eat animals from America’s factory farms.
This review originally appeared on The Englewood Review of Books website.
“99% of the meat sold in the United States today comes from a factory farm.”
In the 1970s, my missionary parents uprooted us from the barefoot paradise of Papua New Guinea and planted us in Southern California. My mother, suffering a bizarre set of health issues, began looking for answers in healthy eating practices. While other kids ate Twinkies and Ding Dongs, Mother read Adelle Davis books on nutrition and force-fed us cod liver oil.
Perhaps because of this, my need to fit in urged me to become a steak-loving “normal” person. Food, for me, was always more than mere sustenance; it was a visceral, beautiful, even creative thing. But as far being a political statement or a critical health issue, well that was strictly for the weirdoes.
Reading Jonathan Safran Foer’s Eating Animals was the first time that I seriously considered that the Chicken Parmesan in front of me or the meat neatly stacked in my refrigerator was once a living thing. And confronted by the horrors of modern animal farming, as recounted in shocking detail by Foer, I had to face certain facts: factory farms are disgusting and dangerous for our health.
Foer made a three-year investigation into the sickening story that is American meat, describing with ghastly precision the disease, deformity and eventual mutilation of animals that defines factory farming today. I was filled with revulsion as Foer chronicled his grisly experience and quickly came to understand why Ellen DeGeneres has called Eating Animals “one of the most important books [she’s] ever read.”
The story is heart-wrenching, repulsive and barbaric. One learns that the idyllic family farms we picture in our minds (think Charlotte‘s Web) have been transformed into secretive, highly secured factories lined with rows of “confinement pens” where animals languish, never seeing real daylight. Foer admits to clandestinely breaking into a turkey farm to discover locked pen doors, gas masks on the walls, chicks with blackened beaks, and both dead and living birds matted with blood and covered in sores. He details dozens of eerily similar stories indicting the farming of pigs, chickens, cows and even fish:
“The power brokers of factory farming know that their business model depends on consumers not being able to see (or hear about) what they do.”
In a riveting (if also occasionally, rambling) narrative, Foer contends the meat industry is corrupt, with structures supporting the consumer-driven “need” for cheap meat. Foer notes that prices haven’t substantially increased since the mid-fifties, and that the “efficiencies” of the factory system are the source of this “benefit.” I was stunned to learn that only 1% of the meat we consume comes from family-run old-fashioned farms. The rest is from factories where biodiversity is replaced by genetic uniformity, and the antibiotic-laced animals may be contributing to strange flu like symptoms ravaging millions of Americans.
With gritty specifics, allowing for many perspectives, Foer draws personal conclusions, while making it clear that our collective actions can change these practices. But only by agreeing individually to stop purchasing factory farmed meat.
In this philosophical horror story, I was confronted with my “need” and realized I can no longer be a part of supporting this corrupt system. A “normal” evangelical Mom, I am choosing to no longer eat animals unless they come locally and humanely from a farm.
We the collective consumer must make conscious choices, even sacrifices. Foer says it well, “We are defined not just by what we do. We are defined by what we are willing to do without.” We need to put meat in the middle of the plate of our public discourse.
Melody- I’m going to be a semi-regular reviewer for Englewood Review, check them out!
- I’ve also reviewed the Resignation of Eve, by Jim Henderson at Provoketive magazine.
What’s changing, so that I can be writing!
This is such a busy time for folks with kids. We are living the last month or so of school and for whatever reason my kids seem to teeter on the brink of things this year academically, spiritually, emotionally — this has been a challenging and demanding year. With summer looming, there will be any opportunities to stick our feet in the river and less time to write.
I am thinking about that tension.
I’m starting to work more seriously on writing projects. As I listened hard at the Festival of Faith & Writing and looked at my writing life and habits, I realize that I need to cut back on some things before I can ever dream of space to write every day. (I know I have a lot to tell you about that experience, the festival. We’ve been back a week and there’s been no time!)
Projects that I’m working on:
I am working on a book review of the book Eating Animals by Jonathan Safran Foer for The Englewood Review of Books and hope to do more of those, both for Englewood and other publications.
I continue to write for Provoketive magazine: This included a review of the book Resignation of Eve by Jim Henderson, a piece titled The Accidental Stay-At-Home Mom and others, but by far the most popular essay was The Voice of the Feminine. That content is not repeated here on my blog so you will have to pop over to there to read it. I hope you will.
I am working on a short series of articles on “The F word and the Church.” (Yeah, that F word: feminist.)
I am really excited to hear that I will have some poem in a book about fear titled Not Afraid to be published around August, 2012 by Civitas Press. (This is the same press that published my essay on Depression in their book Not Alone which is available now. If you know someone who suffers from depression this book may help. I have been told by many people that it has been a good, honest resource. I also have many pieces on my blog about my personal trials with the black dog of depression. They are collected here. )
What I want to change:
One thing that I find to be soul crushing and destructive for me is Facebook. Being at-home with such great flexibility to my schedule I see that I allow many things to interfere with the “work” of writing and with spiritual growth. Facebook is such a time waster for me. I’m inherently curious, nosy kind of person and the fact that I can vicariously follow along other’s lives is bad for me. That’s where the soul crushing part comes in. It’s like high school insecurity all over again. So I’ve been tempted to quit completely.

But at the Festival of Faith & Writing I heard over and over that writers must have online presence and following. We have to nurture that and be able to “prove” our popularity to a publisher. But the flip side of that is that it is just not good for me!
If I don’t have time
to think,
to be,
to write and
to allow the Holy One to mold and move me (not really in that order.)
So I’m backing off of social media for a season — except here. I’m really going to try to do this moderately. When I got hooked on Farmville (of all things — proves I can get addicted to anything!) I had to quit cold turkey and I did. I don’t want to do that with Facebook because I don’t like being an all or nothing person. But I’m going to try to limit my time there. And set some writing goals for the next few months. I look forward to sharing those with you.
Another thing that I learned at the festival was that I need to hone the purpose of my blog. Mine has multiple messages and intents. I have been known to write about:
- family (dysfunctional and otherwise.)
- God and devotion, faith and (dis)belief
- women in the church, feminism as a Christian’s option
- various justice issues
- my alcoholism and addictions
- my church – Blackhawk Evangelical Church
- poetry on all these topics
- prose on all these topics
Is there anything in particular that you come here to read? Where do you see my passions and strengths converging in helpful ways? Would you add more of anything?
Grace & Peace. Melody
Today I Said No
Today I said no.
I said no to something that might have been sweet and good, something that I would enjoy and that would make me feel good about myself – helping other people. It was something that was even noble. Can I be honest and tell you that I need some things to do that make me feel good about myself? The recent Stations of the Cross exhibit, which I was a part of, was profound for me in that it was a thing that I did, for me.
Today I said no.
No because there are other good things, needs, jobs for me to do. And I have to be careful as an addict, to not feed that need to help others.
Things are going on in my family, screaming out to me, which need resolution and clarity and my time. My children are of the age that they need my daily prayer, daily. My attention, fully. My love and affirmations, honestly. This takes the kind of attention that I haven’t had for them as of yet. My widowed mother living alone needs more of my attention, care and to be blunt she needs errands accomplished. My sisters each deserve my love and attention in a way that I haven’t ever had the courage to give them. My marriage isn’t perfect; it has holes that need patching even though, after eighteen years together, we know it’s for life. We’re in the boat together but we’ve sprung a few leaks. No one’s sinking but we deserve to give the time that a good marriage requires.
So, today I said no – no to something good. So that I could say yes to being a mother, a sister, a daughter, a wife and more than anything I said yes to be a writer.
Today I said yes.
Good People (those that toil, so that others can create)
There are people,
good people who toil every day
at work they don’t love and some
days simply endure.
Why do these people, good people do that?
They’re partnered with a creative soul;
a dreamer, someone
who scribbles words one after another, collected into pages
of an idea that is yet to come;
that hears a different drum beat and dance;
who changes others’ trajectory through an image or a song;
who observes life for its beauty and complexity;
who follows an uncomfortable path into the unknown.
These people, good people do
their everyday work because they love a dreamer.
Here’s to the good people whose love’s labor
is a gift to us all.
For Tom and Carol and the other good people.
the middle years (a poem about aging and knowing that you don’t know…much of anything)
The middle years
of middle age come without fair warning.
Raising the young
who think they know everything.
And those of us solidly wedged into midlife know
with confidence, that we know next to nothing.
The middle years are half way to a certain death,
while breathing in a life we did not pick. For
life happens even as you make plans, dream dreams, and pray.
The middle years
when the body betrays,
the heart is crushed
by what actually happened,
not our plans.
The mind with every strong conviction
is suddenly even more
uncertain.
Oh, for the days of knowing everything!
But then going back there to certainty
would mean doing this
all over again.
Silent for Days, becomes Years
Silent for Days, becomes years
when the Girl Child now Woman is afraid of her own words,
allowing her many fears to overwhelm.
sometimes offering Powerful Utterances
that shape, guide, portend,
sometimes paralyzed.
Deep calls to Deep, inside
the Place Where She is Full, saying
lay down, let go.
Silent for Days, becomes years
when the Girl Child now Woman
knows and comes to love
herself and comes to believe
in the One who Gave His Life for us all.
Still waters, Silent
deep, deep inside
the Girl Child now Woman is daily groping,
hoping not to misstep. knowing
she holds one, two, three, four
Souls in her sweaty, grasping hands.
she is hopeful and
needing, wanting to nurture and heal.
so much faith, so much potential, so much possibility.
Silent for Days, becomes years
when Girl Child now Woman
lays down her life, lets go
of control,
of results,
of Knowing her Future or
knowing anything at all.
building calluses on her knees, head
bowed, tears flowing, hands
open, heart
free.
the Girl Child now Woman knows
how little she knows.
she lets go. her heart
bursting from the agony of it,
the birthing of the one, two, three, four lives
put into her hands and
her One Life.
Just ahead, Looms. Just ahead,
the One who Gave His Life for us all
Asks it of her
and she lets go.
When It Hurts to be called out by God’s Spirit
This now has a part two. It is found here.
I’ve been uneasy and perturbed. I am a Slow Learner. I know that an edgy, even grumpy unsettled spirit inside me usually means that there’s business to attend to and something to be learned. I am drawn down into a Place of Reckoning. I am learning in the place of Love where God begins to change and shape me into Someone Other Than Me.
It usually requires time. And when finally my ego shrinks down to a normal size, I am ready to start. This time I shakily verbalized it to Tom.
Bless him, my Tom has my rhythms down. He knows when I need an ear, when I want (need or don’t need) advice, and the instances that I must simply talk (out loud.) Introverts will know what I mean. We introverts talk all the time, right? It is just in our heads, which is sometimes unproductive, unhelpful or unclear.
Gideon was the most unlikely of people to lead the people of Israel and perhaps ironically, his name means “Destroyer,” “Mighty warrior,” or “Feller (of trees).” His story read in chapters 6 to 8 of the Book of Judges in the Hebrew Bible was not one of a giant faith, in my opinion. Really his faith was immature; he was often testing and always questioning God’s power, before he would act. He had a “do this for me and I will do x for you” attitude.
That’s me. I suppose what most convicted me by thinking about Gideon’s story is the obvious ways that I’ve flailed about, unsure and doubting myself every step of the way over the last few years. I have made some messes and done some stupid shit. Recently (the last two years especially) I’ve been angry and unsatisfied, especially wanting “clarity about my career.” I have asked for it, even demanding it. [As if God cares, really what I do. Okay, he cares some but ultimately, this is only measured against who I am and how I treat others. How do I love? Do I serve the needs of those who are powerless among us? ]
How very ungrateful I have been.
My heart lurches. I know ingratitude when it sneers at me.
Fact is the Strong Independent Me believes deeply that women should have a job. (Everyone should have a “job” men and women, young people, old people … I fundamentally believe in the idea that everyone should contribute to the community, everyone is obligated to this.)
It is especially important to me that women have careers and “represent.” Do you know what I mean? I live with a lot of guilt, even shame that I don’t have a career right now. Or even simply a job. Just a job. Any job.
And this is how it goes in my head. Beyond the value to the community, a job earns “Respect.” Respect would make me feel validated and valuable and valued. A job where I go to a different place (than my home) and do “things.” If I am most honest, things that will build me up and help others recognize my value. Then bring home a paycheck for all the same reasons.
I’m a writer.
I know with certainty that I would write even if I never got paid or published because I have been a writer for as long as I can remember and it is who I am. The same goes for my photography — I live and breathe the pulse of life through a lens. I put word by word, ideas together as an offering.
But as I toil in relative obscurity, Ego Me leaps out saying that this won’t do. Who cares if you are an essayist or poet, who cares if you are writing here on this blog if no one knows and applauds? Bingo! That’s the crux. Validate me world! Say what you think of me please.
A friend got mad at something I said. Mad because I said that art is useless. I know that is not true. And I don’t even believe it, but the voices in my head tell me otherwise.
That’s crazy, and besides, in God’s framing of things it shouldn’t matter. I have to know my value is legit no matter what I do.
And I have (to learn) to believe that creating art is not useless.
And so for now at least, I will write.
And what I felt most convicted about from the sermon this week was my infantile attitude and my lack of gratitude for this life that I have. Shame on me. My anxiety comes out of this place. My fear comes directly from that spigot, gushing, flowing, spilling all over me in ugly incomprehensible ways.
Gideon tested God on more than one occasion. He never complained, but he didn’t believe.
Do you flail about in an infantile way demanding that God meet all your needs as if you deserve to be happy, fulfilled and useful?
Have you learned the slow path to contentment and spiritual maturity that involves a way of relaxing into Him, both by trusting and by stepping out into an unknown future looming ahead?
May it be so.
P.S. As I mentioned, this has a part two. It is found here.
On Motherhood, On Children
I’ll be the first to admit it. I fight daily with the little devil on my shoulder. That being tells me lies.
I feel it so vividly – the tensions of being a stay at home mom, a lack of validation in the culture at large for motherhood or stay at home parents, and the voice inside me telling me almost every day “It’s not enough! Do more, be significant, something special.” A lot of my poetry recently has come out of that place.
God has reminded me, for some reason, of the truth that we never know whose mother we are — in that we don’t know who our children will become. If we knew that our sons or daughters, nieces or nephews, would grow up to be the next Barack Obama, or Madeleine L’Engle, Joan Chittister, or Scot McKnight, or Michelangelo, whomever, would we look at parenting, at mothering, differently?
They all had mothers.
Fathers. Aunties and Uncles.
Your role in the life of a child is a role that only you can fulfill even though most days you likely consider it insignificant.
This post was inspired in some part by reading this.
Logic & Imagination
Be kind for everyone you meet is fighting a huge battle. — Phylo of Alexandria
I am still processing time I spent today, alongside my mother and a lot of mostly grey haired women, at the Holy Wisdom monastery. And my ten-year old turns eleven tomorrow, so life will be a little full over the next twenty-four hours with ice-cream cake and video games, rides here and there, and the flow of life as a mother of four.
While I mull on what I have learned, I thought you might enjoy seeing the list of the top ten articles on my blog this month. A few are recent work, but I was surprised to see that several are oldies but goodies like What’s a Woman of Leisure?, On Parenting Deeply and Well, and the ebb and flow.
It is an incredible honor to know that you all are reading and walking with me.
On Motherhood: Searching for Meaningful Metanarrative
I keep crying out that I want a bigger purpose for my life.
The universe cries back, your purpose is right in front of you.
I cry back– it’s not enough. It’s not enough. This is not enough!
I cannot pretend. I’ve been up and down, sometimes miserable lately. And I’m ashamed of myself. Why is it that I just cannot figure out how to be happy? I had an interaction with E yesterday that spun me into these gloomy thoughts. We were talking about cheerful people – you know the kind. The people whose voices go up when they talk to you and they always smile and they are mostly cheerful and helpful!! They seem to have an inner glow.
It’s just not me, I am mellow, solidly so, but she really likes those sorts of people! (Even though, or perhaps because, she isn’t one.)
I don’t like them, necessarily. I doubt people’s sincerity, strangers, when they behave like that. I find them hard to trust. People that I know in my real life, who are like that, I take with a grain of salt. But it is hard for me to accept that they are always UP even as I try to believe people like that are sincere, not putting me on. But I have to admit they can grate on me.
But I realized yesterday that I long to be that sort of Mother. Oh, I encourage, I hug, I kiss, I affirm like crazy – but I don’t slather on love or exude joy. I’m not all over my kids, thrilled that they simply exist and I’m just lucky to be their mom! (Though I am, very fortunate to have them.) And I don’t serve pink Valentine’s Day meals or even give valentines to my kids.
But my daughter wouldn’t let me even try yesterday – pushing me away when I smothered her with kisses and smiles. “It’s just not real, Mom.” Saying that I was making fun of her, which I definitely wasn’t. That got me really in the dumps yesterday.
I woke today with gloomy, anxious thoughts. My body physically hurts from my heart racing so much. I even thought I was getting sick, so I laid down yesterday. Just as I dropped off to sleep – probably ten times – a jolt of adrenaline woke me. I know this, it is anxiety. (And I start to wonder if I should return to my shrink. Damn it, I haven’t seen him in a good long while and somehow returning solidifies my failure. Failure to stay calm and maintain my mood. )
Even as God did a beautiful thing just last week or was it the week before? And he brought me out of the depression that clung to me from November to January. It seems that I cannot maintain any peace in my heart.
Reading through the Bible with my church. We’re in the book of Numbers. And I am struck by the Israelites inability to trust God. Even as they had miracles – Clouds leading them, and manna provided for them and plagues cursing them … and I think to myself, if God spoke to me like that, I’d have more faith that he’s got a plan for my life. (Um, maybe.)
Perhaps it really is simply that I don’t trust God with my days – with my future.
I think, I just need to be struck with some horrible punishment like Miriam when she challenged things (Nu 12) and then I’d believe. Then I’d stop complaining. Or would I?
And every time the people do something stupid, Moses and Aaron’s response was to fall face down on the ground. Hm…..
Is that what I’m doing? Am I just complaining when I say I just want to be happy. I find the days I am living — the sweeping up endless dirt, cooking and washing up, washing and folding, the damn whiny dog, the endless homework, and children who really don’t want to achieve, trying to be helpful and failing,
endless, same, same, same…
Being at home is about giving up my rights, serving. But perhaps I am not principled enough to get meaning out of any of it. Not much anyway.
Phooey, I can’t stand myself right now.
A friend keeps telling me to read the Bible for the metanarrative. I think to myself. I cannot even live life in the big narrative.
I’m sweeping up dust bunnies and resenting every minute.
I’ll regret this grumpy post. I always do. Definitely not living in the light! But I need to be truthful, even if it’s not cheerful! Some days that is all I’m holding on to — being a person that is straight and honest. Some days.
















