Affording the Good Stuff

I stole this from my friend Amy's blog -who stole it from someone else's blog. That tells ya it's pretty good, doesn't it! lol.


AFFORDING THE GOOD STUFF

The other day while painting my daughter’s room, with the little kids safely cordoned off elsewhere, I actually had time to daydream. Mind wandering, I found myself wondering how it would feel to have enough money for a week in Hawaii. A kitchen remodel. A couple weeks in Europe. Or even the freedom to zip off to California for the weekend just for the fun of it. All the stuff that’s hard to fit in the budget while raising eight kids on a single income. For just a moment I wondered about the life we don’t have, the path we didn’t choose. What would be it be like if we had stopped having children after our first two daughters. If we’d chosen that other path, what might we have instead? We’d have a matched bedroom set, but no little kids bouncing on our bed in the mornings. We’d have the latest in video equipment, but no 4 year old pirouetting for the camera. We’d have video of Hawaii beaches, but none of Christmas programs featuring half a dozen of our brood. We’d see the Eiffel tower, but we’d never see 8 ‘stairsteps’ lined up on the beach grinning for a photo. We’d have a cool commercial range, but no pots big enough to properly test it. We’d have new living room carpet, but no rosy-cheeked 8 year olds to wrestle there. We’d have a nice lawn, but no teenagers gleefully chasing toddlers around the yard. We’d have a hot tub, but no little children splashing and squirt-gun-fighting. We’d have nice dinnerware, but the dinner table would be nearly empty. And what about our children if there were only two? They might have gone on a cruise, but they would have missed the eye-opening trip to another country to adopt a sibling. They’d have pictures with made-up Disney princesses, but none with tiny sisters looking adoringly up at them. Their college may have been paid for, but later they’d bear the burden of aging parents alone. They’d have designer jeans, but no mob of siblings to laugh with later in life over childhood memories. The individual present-piles under the Christmas tree would have been bigger, but I don't know how a small crew around the tree each year could compare to the ever-growing mob that comes from a big family, as children become adults and add their own spouses and children to the joy of the season. You know what? I think we’re affording the good stuff after all.

Comments

C said…
Here's something else, just to remember how unbelievably rich we are:

Miniature Earth
Recovering Noah said…
Hey Christine - the link didn't pop up. Can you send it again? I really want to see it!

Thanks!
Leslie
TracyC said…
Great sentiments! It's hard not to get wrapped up in commercialism, eh? Not that my kids are at all like that. Nope. (We're up to item 6,467,892 on the what I REALLY want for Christmas Mummy list.) On the other hand, I think that we are amazingly wealthy to be able to afford the children we have since so much of the world lives on less than a dollar a day. Ouch!
C said…
http://www.miniature-earth.com/
me_english.htm
sj said…
I loved the "affording the good stuff", she is sooo right. We get so caught up in what society dictates. Leslie, hang in there. You are doing a great job and you are right where God wants you. Keep looking to Him and He will give you more than all them London trips combined!! Have a Merry Christmas.
Anonymous said…
Leslie, I share your sentiments, except I am still working the insane hours in the professional job, etc., counting the days until I can have your life. But, then I am sure that I will want my current life back, all because we all struggle with contentment. It's okay to desire the good stuff... Really we desire perfection, which I try to remind myself is a desire for God. Every time I take a trip or see something new that this world says is the good stuff, and I'm left, at some point, feeling disappointed -- like it wasn't quite as good as I expected it to be -- I remind myself that I was made for perfection, and that yearning is to be with God in an eternity of perfection. That is a desire that NOTHING in this world can fulfill. Hang in there! We can all relate... Devon (from Holt board)

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