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Poems

January 26, 2016 by lauren.anvari@gmail.com Leave a Comment

Poems

As I lay in bed with a baby nestled against me, cheek pressed to my chest,

I write poems in my head, that will never be read.

While rocking a baby in the quiet dark of night, who refuses to be lulled into slumber,

I write poems in my head, that will never be read.

In the moments I take to savor the sweet ache in my muscles, from holding a baby for hours on end,

I write poems in my head, that will never be read.

Of love and joy and pain and light. The trials and triumphs of motherhood.

I write poems in my head, that will never be read,

that is,

except,

for this one.

Filed Under: My life Tagged With: motherhood, parent, poem, poetry

Happy Mother’s Day // 2015

May 10, 2015 by lauren.anvari@gmail.com 1 Comment

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Dear Asher and Bennett,

Thank you! Thank you for making me a mother.

Thank you for teaching me true selflessness, for testing me every day, for bringing me infinite joy, for helping me learn patience and for showing me that detachment is a hard won virtue.

Thank you for your sweet cuddles and for your chubby cheeks, which are just so kissable.

Thank you for filling my heart with so much love that at times I feel that it may burst, because no heart should be able to hold this much love, and yet, it does. And the more I get to know you, with every passing day, I only love you more.

I’m sorry for my short comings. I’m sorry for yelling sometimes, I’m sorry for not giving you 100% of my attention every second of every day, because you deserve all my attention. You deserve all my time.

I promise I’ll keep striving to be better. I know I’ve made mistakes and I know I’ll make more but thank you for forgiving me and for loving me anyway.

You are unequivocally the best things I have ever done. I just feel so deeply blessed and humbled that I get to be the person you call “mom”.

I love you!

xx

Mommy

Filed Under: My life Tagged With: children, May 10, mom, mother's day, motherhood

A Love Like No Other

May 15, 2013 by lauren.anvari@gmail.com 11 Comments

Everyone told me that having a baby would truly show me what it meant to love.  That nothing would compare and that the love I would feel for that tiny bundle would be like nothing I had ever felt before.  When I was pregnant with Asher I knew I loved him, I could feel him inside me and as he grew so did my love for the tiny stranger within me.  Once he was born I stared into his eyes and I loved him even more, but I didn’t exactly think that what I was feeling was something new or unfamiliar.  I loved him, but I felt it was the same depth of love that I felt for my husband, parents, family and dearest friends.  I felt I had been deceived in some way, or that the reality of the feelings that I would have for my son was blown out of proportion.  Like it was a story that parents told other parents because it sounded romantic.

Slowly and almost imperceptibly at first that love grew.  The more I got to know my little boy, the more my heart swelled with love for him.  One day as I looked at his tiny face I was suddenly struck by the enormity of the feelings that I felt for him.  I could hardly comprehend the power of my love for this perfect soul.  To love someone so completely is something I have never experienced.  I ache every time I see my nose and his father’s lips together on his face.  Sometimes I literally can not get close enough to him.  I want to inhale him and soak him up.  I want to bottle the way his skin feels under my finger tips and the way he smells in the grey early morning light, so that years from now, when he is grown, I can be brought back and remember them as vividly as I am experiencing them now.

He is growing so fast, I feel like this precious time with him is slipping away.  This time when I am the center of his world.  I have never wanted to be the center of anyone’s world, but now that I am, I savor the weight of it.  In just one month he will start on solid food and I suspect that will be the first step towards him gaining his independence.  I want that for him.  I want him to grow up and to leave the nest and to get married and to have babies of his own, but it still aches.  The thought of him leaving.  He will only be a baby for a year.  One, single short year and then he’ll be a toddler, a little boy, a teenager, a man and I won’t be able to sneak into his room at night just to gaze at him and savor the sweet sounds of his breath.  That year is nearly half gone already and I can’t seem to comprehend how that even happened.  Every day the depth of my feelings for him grows stronger.  I already struggle to understand the vastness of how I feel for him and I know that there is no way to even fathom what my love will be for him in 2 days, 2 weeks, 2 years, 2 decades.  I feel so incredibly humbled that I get to know this bright soul before anyone else does.  I don’t always cherish the moments I have with him.  When I’m up with him at 4 a.m. or when he spits up down my shirt I think about how I can’t wait for him to outgrow this stage, too just be a little bit older. But when he’s nursing and gazing at me with those slate grey eyes, I know that I want to hold on to these fleeting second for eternity.  I can’t though.  I blink and they’re gone, soon to become distant fading memories, clouded by the onslaught of time.  My yucky, sticky, sweet, happy little boy.  

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Filed Under: My life Tagged With: baby, infant, love, mama's boy, mother, motherhood, parenting, precious child, precious soul, reflection, time, treasure

A Shout Out to My Mom on Mother’s Day

May 12, 2013 by lauren.anvari@gmail.com 1 Comment

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Becoming a mom has made me so deeply thankful for my own parents.  They are rock stars in my book.  I wrote them a letter a few weeks ago, letting them know how I feel and I share part of it with you all now, to honor the amazing woman that is my mother and in the hopes of inspiring you to do the same for your own mothers.  

———————-

Dear Mom,

As I am now a mother myself, I realize profoundly all the sacrifices you made for us.  Being a mother is the single hardest thing I have ever done.  It is a thankless job and greatly under valued by society at large, which is something I am struggling with and I’m sure you struggled with.  Perhaps there were times when you even felt that Dad took what you did for granted, I know I feel that way about Raf sometimes. Being a mother is wonderful but also challenging, deeply rewarding, but also lonely, and the most wonderful experience but also incredibly testing.  As mothers we are faced with two very difficult decisions: to work on our careers or to work at raising our children and to do both means to sacrifice something from each.  I know now what you gave up for us.  You gave up finding and pursuing your passion.  Not only did you do that, but then you went on to do something that you disliked immensely, which was to home school us and we both know that I didn’t make it easy.  You spent 8 years homeschooling me and giving me the educational building blocks for all my future scholastic achievements.  I have my MPH today, because of the sacrifices you made.  Beyond, the sacrifices you made for me to ensure that I was educated you were also an excellent example for me.  You did (and still do) so much for us and never made us feel bad about it, you never reminded us of all you gave up for us and you were incredibly patient.  You allowed us to be free to explore, to fall down, and to make our own mistakes, while probably worrying about us the whole time.  I know, I don’t tell you as often as I should, but I’m so deeply blessed and grateful that I have you as a mother.  I need you more than I say or show.  I couldn’t have asked for a better mom. I know we’re very different in many ways, but I like to think that I got many of my strengths as a mom from you.  I’m so sorry it has taken me 28 years to tell you how much I appreciate you, because I do, now more than ever.  You are the kindest, gentlest, sweetest, most loving woman I know and I feel so proud that I get to call you mom.  You are a hero. You are my hero.

I miss you every. single. day.  I love you!

Happy Mother’s Day!

Filed Under: My life Tagged With: daughter, honoring, love, mom, mommy, mother - daughter, mother's day, motherhood, parents, thank you

The Most Rewarding

April 30, 2013 by lauren.anvari@gmail.com 8 Comments

Almost every time I tell anyone that being a stay at home mom is the hardest thing I have ever done, they immediately reply with “but also the most rewarding, right?”.  To which I generally say “yes, of course!”  However, I am always left feeling guilty because deep down I’m not sure I see it that way.  Maybe I need to redefine my definition of rewarding.

Don’t get me wrong.  I LOVE being a mom.  It is my biggest dream come true, but when I think of something being rewarding, I don’t generally envision changing diapers, being covered in spit-up, sleep deprivation and going days without any meaningful adult interaction, instead I think of having a career I’m passionate about.  Curing cancer would be rewarding.  Establishing public health practices in under served communities would be rewarding.

I love the fact that I get to be present for all of Asher’s firsts.  His first smile, his first laugh, first roll, etc.  Is being a stay at home mom really the ‘most rewarding’ though?  Not really.  At least not yet, not for me.  It is hard work.  It is lonely.  It is testing.  Sure it can be deeply rewarding in the sense that I have brought this amazing soul into this world, but I wouldn’t classify it as the most rewarding.  The most important? Yes.  The most rewarding? Not yet.  Maybe this will change, after all my son is only four months old. I just think it’s important to be honest about these things, because if I’m feeling them, then someone else is too. There is too much of a culture of shame in the parenting community.  It’s almost as though parents aren’t allowed to complain about how hard it can get, without also reaffirming how amazing it is and sometimes all this ‘putting our best feet forward’ is exhausting and leaves everyone feeling like they aren’t doing as good of a job as someone else.

I wish more parents would talk about the challenges they face or the tests they endure rather than always presenting their lives as perfect packages filled with rainbows, ribbons and professional looking photographs of gourmet meals that they post on pinterest.  Let’s have a balanced perspective please.  Yes, being a mom is wonderful and fulfilling in ways I never imagined and I am so thankful every single day for being able to take on this role, but if you drop by unannounced, you will find my house in various stages of disorder and chaos.  The bed won’t be made, there will be a laundry basket of clean clothes that has been sitting in the living room for days waiting to be folded, baby clothes, pacifiers and tissues will be strewn about the house and don’t even ask when the last time the house was vacuumed.  My son will generally be smiling after having just completed his most recent abstract expressionism masterpiece consisting of curdled sour milk spit-up in my hair, seriously, I don’t even bother to change into clean clothes most of the time because there is just no point.  Being a parent is the best thing I have ever done but it has yet to be the most rewarding and that’s okay, it doesn’t make me any less of a great mom.

Filed Under: My life Tagged With: baby, children, culture of shame, mom, mommyhood, mother, motherhood, parenting, pinterest, rewarding, son

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