Invisible Mother...
It all began to make sense, the blank stares, the lack of response, the way one of the
kids will walk into the room while I'm on the phone and ask to be taken to the store. Inside I'm thinking, 'Can't you see
I'm on the phone?'
Obviously not. No one can see if I'm on the phone, or cooking, or sweeping the floor, or even
standing on my head in the corner, because no one can see me at all. I'm invisible. The invisible Mom. Some days I am
only a pair of hands, nothing more: Can you fix this? Can you tie this? Can you open this?
Some days I'm not a pair
of hands; I'm not even a human being. I'm a clock to ask, 'What time is it?' I'm a satellite guide to answer, 'What number
is the Disney Channel?' I'm a car to order, 'Right around 5:30, please.'
I was certain that these were the hands
that once held books and the eyes that studied history and the mind that graduated sum a cum laude - but now they had
disappeared into the peanut butter, never to be seen again. She's going, she's going, she's gone!
One night, a group
of us were having dinner, celebrating the return of a friend from England. Janice had just gotten back from a fabulous
trip, and she was going on and on about the hotel she stayed in. I was sitting there, looking around at the others all
put together so well. It was hard not to compare and feel sorry for myself. I was feeling pretty pathetic, when Janice
turned to me with a beautifully wrapped package, and said, 'I brought you this.' It was a book on the great cathedrals
of Europe. I wasn't exactly sure why she'd given it to me until I read her inscription: 'To Charlotte, with admiration
for the greatness of what you are building when no one sees.'
In the days ahead I would read - no, devour - the
book. And I would discover what would become for me, four life-changing truths, after which I could pattern my work:
No one can say who built the great cathedrals - we ha ve no record of their names. These builders gave their whole lives
for a work they would never see finished. They made great sacrifices and expected no credit. The passion of their building was
fueled by their faith that the eyes of God saw everything.
A legendary story in the book told of a rich man who came
to visit the cathedral while it was being built, and he saw a workman carving a tiny bird on the inside of a beam. He
was puzzled and asked the man, 'Why are you spending so much time carving that bird into a beam that will be covered
by the roof? No one will ever see it.' And the workman replied, 'Because God sees.'
I closed the book, feeling the
missing piece fall into place. It was almost as if I heard God whispering to me, 'I see you, Charlotte. I see the sacrifices
you make every day, even when no one around you does. No act of kindness you've done, no sequin you've sewn on, no cupcake
you've baked, is too small for me to notice and smile over. You are build ing a great cathedral, but you can't see right
now what it will become.'
At times, my invisibility feels like an affliction. But it is not a disease that is erasing
my life. It is the cure for the disease of my own self-centeredness. It is the antidote to my strong, stubborn pride.
I
keep the right perspective when I see myself as a great builder. As one of the people who show up at a job that they will
never see finished, to work on something that their name will never be on. The writer of the book went so far as to
say that no cathedrals could ever be built in our lifetime because there are so few people willing to sacrifice to that
degree.
When I really think about it, I don't want my son to tell the friend he's bringing home from college for
Thanksgiving, 'My Mom gets up at 4 in the morning and bakes homemade pies, and then she hand bastes a turkey for three
hours and presses all the linens for the table.' That would mean I'd built a shrine or a monument to myself. I just want
him to want to come home. And then, if there is anything more to say to his friend, to add, 'You're gonna love it there.'
As
mothers, we are building great cathedrals. We cannot be seen if we're doing it right. And one day, it is very possible
that the world will marvel, not only at what we have built, but at the beauty that has been added to the world by the
sacrifices of invisible women.
Great Job, MOM!
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