The Thing About Daughters
I originally wrote this to read aloud at a best friend's baby shower over the weekend. She's expecting her first daughter. {Squee!} I wanted to share it with you too!
I’ve heard
it said that a baby is a mother’s own heart walking outside her body.
And there is
something about a daughter that just makes this extra true.
It doesn’t
matter if you are the mom that made a special Pinterest-inspired pegboard to
organize an almost shameful-to-admit number of bows or if you are the mom that
secretly wonders if you can hack it as a girl-mom when you know how to
accomplish exactly zero hairstyles…unless the ponytail counts.
When a little girl comes into your life and calls you mom, she
will stretch you, change you, hold a mirror up to your own female self and
challenge it.
When she’s
little, you’ll watch your daughter full of her child-like wonder, and you’ll remember what
it was like: the days of pink and longing for tutu’s and ballet slippers, the way
you used to dance on the coffee table and ask for your papa’s attention. You’ll
remember how you could make a mud pie, domesticate a jar for your lady-bug pet,
and just how much it meant to you when your momma would buy you a twirly
Sunday-best dress and then set you on the counter to curl your bangs.
Your
daughter will tell you how pretty you are for years. She’ll likely have
opinions about your clothes, and might even dig out the bridesmaid dress from the
back of your closet and beg you to wear it for your trip to the grocery store.
She will
probably sing about everything. You might even catch her singing her own song
about how beautiful she is. It’ll melt your heart. You’ll both beam with pride
at her self-confidence and cringe at the stark contrast in the way you view
your own self through your flaws. You will make it your mission in life to
protect her confidence and her beauty. You recognize the value of those things
because at some point in your own journey someone or something tried to rob you
of them.
There’s the
moment you first encounter mean girls at the park. It will surprise you how
young it happens, how sharp and diva-like one three-year-old girl can wield the
words, “I don’t want to play with you.” And when your daughter looks to you,
eyes big and wet, it will cut into your own heart—make you remember all the
mean girls you ever encountered. You’ll do your best to reel in your inner
momma bear, and you’ll do your very best to brush off the sharp marks those
kind of words can leave.
There will
come a time when she will confess that she doesn’t like something about
herself: her hair, her freckles, her teeth, her birthmark. She’ll tell you how
the kids made fun of her for it. It’ll catch you off-guard, because you look at
her and you see beauty, you see someone marvelous and full of purpose, someone
you love perfectly and wholly.
{A mother’s
love is like that.}
She’ll
imitate you, watch you, want to be you. She’ll mother her younger siblings, her
stuffed animals, her dolls. While boys might want to make everything fight or
blow up, she’ll want to band-aide and haircut and comfort.
She is your legacy. One day she will pick up the torch you have
held in your own home and she will hold it in hers. She won’t fill her daddy’s
shoes, for she’s meant to fill yours.
She’ll
notice whether or not you swim in your swim suit, the comments you make about
yourself in the fitting room, how you answer when she asks you how much you
weigh. But the thing is, what she’s noticing isn’t how fluffy your stomach is
or how dimply your thighs or how that mole sticks up right next to your nose… she’s noticing if any of that stuff bothers
you.
You’ll
relish in the moments where the parenting curtain is pulled back and you see in
her a friend. She’ll say honest things spoken from a hopeful heart that will
pierce the jaded places in your own heart. You’ll laugh together till your
sides hurt, and you will share inside jokes. There will come a day when you
would actually prefer to take her shopping with you than enjoy an afternoon
shopping without kids.
It will
probably shock you at some point, the way you mirror each other. She will
battle the same insecurities you did. She
is a piece of your own beauty and flaws, your gifts and talents, your
sensitivity, the way you used to dream, the way you respond to conflict, the
way you process life.
Maybe there
will be that moment when she will come home from school with her first broken
heart—be it from a boy crush, cruel words, or a failure in sports or academics.
She might declare herself ugly, not smart, too short, too slow. And you, Momma, this is your shining chance
to fight for her self-worth. You will tell her how beautiful she is, all
the little pieces of individual-fabulousness of her that you adore. When she tells you that you are only saying
that because you are her mom and you have to, you will drag her in front of the
mirror and declare that you will not leave until she can tell you all the best
parts of herself.
Because
maybe the world will try to break her down, tell her who she is and who she
isn’t, tell her what’s she’s worth and wrap up far too much of that worth in
ridiculous physical standards. But that’s why God made you, Girl-mom. You are her very own advocate, the one who knows
that deep-down feminine place of longing to be beautiful, of longing to be
enough. And you, Girl-mom, you are the one that can be her very own mirror and
show her the value of a woman and her own self.
When we
think about having a girl, we think of bows, dress up, and tea parties. But
the thing about a daughter is that she’s your very own feminine heart, walking
outside your body.
Raising a
girl is this glorious chance to fall in love with your own self the way the
Father loves you.
And there’s
so much grace in the fact that she didn’t come with your baggage, your life
experiences, your pain. She is new and fresh and precious. She’s not your
chance to go back and relive your own life better; she’s her own person created
for His glory. She’s your chance to see yourself differently, and your high
calling to advocate for, fight for, pray for and love perfectly.
And maybe
this girl-mom thing is a bit terrifying, you’ll want to protect her from all
the things you can’t control. And maybe it will be hard. But you can trust
Jesus, walk with Him, lean on Him.
Because,
yes, she will face pain and heartache, but you, full of the Spirit’s leading,
will be there to guide her through it.
By Grace,
Amanda Conquers
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