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Motherhood and the Call to Holiness (3120)

How staying at home helped moms understand their vocation. Jan. 15 issue feature.

01/14/2012 Comments (9)
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Recently, the Women at NBCU (a marketing firm for NBC Universal) study found that 66% of moms said they would rather be a stay-at-home parent than a working parent. Additionally, the majority of employed moms (53%) feel that, while financially they need to work, they would prefer to be stay-at-home moms.

Long before she was married or even pregnant, Vicky Stone intended to be a stay-at-home mom. It didn’t work out that way. When she and her husband had their first child, her career was taking off. They had just purchased a house and couldn’t give up the income or benefits. “I think it came down to me being too young and selfish at that time,” she admits. “I couldn’t see the big picture.”

By the time she was pregnant with her fourth child, she had risen to the position of assistant county administrator for Camden County, N.J. She enjoyed the work but felt the overwhelming need to be at home with her children. “Working was coming at the cost of spending time with my family. I needed to re-evaluate my priorities.”

So she left the workforce and never looked back. Now, with seven children, ranging in age from 5 to 16, she knows she made the right choice. She discerned motherhood as her vocation and learned the unique way it sanctifies everyday life.

“God calls each and every one of us to holiness, but being a mother is a special blessing. Being a mother one is able to be his instrument in creation, his hands, as we help our children in all they do,” she says. “We demonstrate his love in our unconditional love for our children — and all of this carries through to not only our own children, but to all.”

Other Catholic women have faced similar challenges and discernment.

When Michelle Reitemeyer was working as a civil engineer, she believed she could balance both a large family and a demanding career. Married at 24, she had her first child at 27. She wanted to stay home, but, like many families, they simply couldn’t afford to lose the extra paycheck: “The reality was that we owed a ton of money from our private college education, and we hadn’t been overly prudent in how we spent our spare cash in our early marriage. I managed to keep my paycheck, but finagled fewer hours in the office and two days working from home.”

This approach didn’t work out too well, and a month before the birth of her second son, she made the decision to stop working and turn to motherhood full time. “Often, a woman works just to pay for childcare, and it makes no sense,” she explains. “Not in my case. Had I poured myself into my career, I could have made a lot of money. I was on an upward path, especially once my company added a commission to my base pay a few months before I quit. But, enticing as that was, I am an old-fashioned girl. I had dreams of waving goodbye to the kids as they left for school, spending my day cleaning the house and baking cookies, greeting them with smiles when they got home, and just having this perfect Leave It to Beaver life. I didn’t want other people to change my babies’ diapers, feed my babies bottles, or help my children with their homework.”

Mother of six Margaret Berns, on the other hand, always knew she would stay home to raise her family. “In fact,” she says, “I told my husband so on our first date. (The fact that he stuck around for a second date was very encouraging.) This is it for me: Raising my children is the most important thing I will do.” She left her job as a teacher in a small Catholic high school upon the birth of her first child.

Heather Price was also working as a teacher when she decided to leave her job to stay at home. Teaching is “probably one of the most family-friendly careers there is,” she says. “I loved it until I was a mother — then the joy paled to nonexistence. I decided to focus on my family when it hurt so much to drop my oldest off at her aunt’s so I could go to work. It seemed hypocritical to be teaching other people’s children and leave someone else to take care of my own. Then No. 2 was born when No. 1 was only a year and a half old, and the work to get out the door was just overwhelming. Between prepared-food costs, gas costs and day-care costs, I wasn’t making any money.”

Now Price is pregnant with her sixth child, and she and her husband are committed to “the spirit of sacrifice. I would love to make annual trips to France or even take graduate-level classes in art history or French; even a solitary trip to the grocery store, however, is a luxury. Sometimes I feel like I live in a cloister, with my only influence being through prayer, but I don’t know that I’m comfortable with that comparison. Those courageous women have made far greater sacrifices than I.”

For Berns, the call to holiness comes from “the love that I show my children and husband. Theoretically, this love will increase exponentially when my children leave the house — the ripples will expand; the faith will be shared. That is my great hope: that my children will all be emissaries of the King and will be inspired, not hindered, by what they’ve learned in our home.”

Some new mothers, however, find the image of the vocation doesn’t always match the reality. How can children be the means for a mother’s sanctification if they only make her irritable, tense and exhausted? Reitemeyer learned gradually that things do get better with age and experience.

“There were many evenings I wept while nursing a little one to sleep,” she admits, “and prayed to Mother Mary for the grace to be gentle and patient and kind. I still have a long way to go, but, certainly, I find it much easier now to speak softly or slow down to a child’s pace or laugh before scolding. Motherhood, well done, has no room for selfishness, impatience, sloth or cowardice. Every day brings new challenges that require exercising one or more virtues, and to boldly face another day is to get a bit stronger, better, holier. Certainly, there is the possibility of failure, of becoming apathetic, of remaining selfish and self-centered. And, surely, as the mother goes, so too will go the family, and thus the world.

“Holy women will tend to raise holy families, and since the family is the fundamental unit of society, the more holy families there are, the better our society will be.”

For Stone, the call to holiness in her vocation reflects the call of God to mankind. “When we become filled with his love,” she says, “we see others as his children. And just as we want to help our children attain their full potential, you can see how God wants all of his children to attain heaven. We feel the call to help others, as we should, on our path to walk alongside us as we strive to be more pleasing to him.”

Thomas L. McDonald is a catechist in the Diocese of Trenton, New Jersey.


INFORMATION

Michelle Reitemeyer blogs at MReitemeyer.blogspot.com.

Margaret Berns blogs at PatentsGirl.blogspot.com.

 

Filed under motherhood, stay-at-home moms, vocation

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That’s wonderful. However, this article is missing a mom who has discerned a vocation to motherhood that doesn’t pay for daycare (works opposite schedule with her husband) and still can’t afford to lose the paycheck and benefits to stay home with her children.

These women’s experiences all sound wonderful and beautiful, and some of my friends have answered this call and love being stay-at-home mothers, but what women who end up single mothers and have to work? How do we answer the call to holiness? Our calling is not any less important, and our needs are much different. Some guidance for us would be appreciated as well.

I always thought I would work.  It’s funny, I just thought I would have to and that would be a certainity.  I thought I could never afford to stay at home and most men will always want you to work.  My first daughter was diagnosed with mild autism when she was a little over 2 and I had a 6 month old.  So, it became clear what needed to be done.  My older daughter needed a lot of intense thearpy and her whole realm of possibilities for the rest of her life depended on me making sure it happened.  And it’s funny, but once you know that you can’t work and you must focus on the kids, you spend differently and everything else revolves around making sure the kids have what they need.  Like having their mom there for them.  Now that I know how much work kids are, I can’t imagine trying to do anything else.

Then how come I’d be a rich woman if I had a buck for every time I listened to my older female relatives griping about how lucky we younger ones were to not be ‘stuck at home with a bunch of d-d kids ’ ?

There is more than one way to fulfill the vocation of motherhood in a holy manner.  I agree, this article doesn’t address the issue of when moms really *do* need to work outside the home.  Sometimes those reasons are financial (maybe not in salary, but in benefits).  Sometimes those reasons aren’t financial.  In my particular field (medicine), I have to stay active or risk losing the ability to continue in the future.  We don’t need the extra $$ right now, but we will in 5 years (when the kids are in school)—and I can’t simply not work for 5 years and then jump right back in.  There are a lot of other professional fields that are like that, too.  I think that most people really, truly do try to make the best decisions they can at the time in order to provide for their families.  For many working moms, it’s not all about “self-actualization” or materialism that drives their decision to work.

I was tickled to see Margaret Burns’ quote.  I, too, told my future husband that I wanted to stay home and raise a child.  I wasn’t even thinking about more than one, but that one and my husband were going to be it.  I was really shocked that he wanted to see me again, actually.  I left the military when I was 4 months pregnant and I don’t regret one single moment of my time at home with my family.  God has blessed us tremendously.

How fortunate I was that God literally directed me to the epitome of holiness in stay at home moms.  We loved each other for 63 years before we were parted by death last April.  She religiously devoted her whole life for her family, and was a consummate wife, mother, and grandmother.  We hugged before going to bed each night always thankful that we still had each other.  The night before she died suddenly as if in premonition, I gave her an extra big hug.  I have no idea when our future together will be, but I know the reward for loving God she can now see. Leaving memories now ever in mind,love has been the blessing she left behind.

Oh, modern feminist woman! What a mess you’ve made of God’s plan. We’ve all bought a lie that we have to go to college, choose a career, work toward success, contracept to stay ahead of tha=e game because there is no higher achievement on earth than to get recongnition for our efforts. Feminists fought so hard for equality that they forgot that equality does not mean “sameness”, and somehow they believe that the female is someways less in dignity because of the “limitations” of motherhood. Why were we in such a rush to take on Adam’s punishment of toiling??? Could we not be satisfied with a vocation so noble that it was assigned to Mary from Heaven?
This is article is not shocking, as it has become clear that today’s younger generations are thankfully finally starting to see the error of the push to masculinize, over-sexualize, and de-fertilize women.
Donna, that’s sad that you’ve heard that so many times about children in the negative. Children are always blessings. Nothing worth having is easy, and not all people understand or appreciate the gifts they are given. If so, we would not have women everywhere attempting to pretend that their “crippling” fertility will just “go-away” with a pill.

The Church does not teach, however, that all of those called to the vocation of motherhood are also called to not work outside the home. So we shouldn’t preach as if this is what is right for every Catholic family.

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