Nicole K. Twedt

Being Brave When Life Is Hard

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WE GO TOGETHER

11.10.2022 by Nicole Kristin Twedt //

Photo by Hannah Busing, courtesy of Unsplash

Every now and then I get a chance to share a few words in the form of a Mentor Moment with my local MOPS group. MOPS is an acronym for Mothers of Preschoolers. The gist of MOPS is No Mom Alone, at least it was during my first foray with the group, back when my big kids were littles. I’m pretty sure the point is the same: to provide a place for mothers of young children to get the support and love they need to know they’re not alone in this challenging yet breathtaking season of life. It’s also all about Jesus.

Good morning! I’m Nicole. I’m the mentor mom who is more like your big sister. At least that’s what I tell myself. Those of you who’ve been around this group for a bit know I’m the mentor mom who basically got knocked up and had a baby at 40. I know what it’s like to be in the trenches of motherhood because I’m very much still in the trenches of motherhood. I’m also the mentor mom with ADHD so I can pretty much guarantee I’ll be all over the place this morning. Hang in there. I’ve come to learn that because my mind is everywhere, I see God everywhere, too.

I set off to write a mentor moment peppered with humor.

SIDE NOTE #1: I’m not that funny. Everything I came up with was lame. And when I say lame, I may or may not have been planning a dry-shampoo tutorial. Besides, I actually washed my hair last night.

Instead, what I’d like to do this morning is acknowledge that life is hard right now for many of you. BUT there is good news: You are not alone in these hard times.

SIDE NOTE #2: YOU ARE NOT ALONE is basically like saying WE GO TOGETHER. And WE GO TOGETHER is this year’s theme at MOPS. How about that?

You are welcome here. You belong. You are worthy, and I really hope you’ll put yourself out there, be vulnerable, take a few risks, at least enough to experience true friendship and community with the women at your table and in this group. We go together in the beautiful yet terrible trenches of motherhood.

I’m supposed to encourage you but this mentor moments has nothing to do with me giving you advice or me being your personal cheerleader, cheering for you on the sideline. 

SIDE NOTE #3 I’m an introvert. I’m more likely to be found whispering positive affirmations in your ear. There will be no yelling.

Side notes aside, the point I’m trying to make is this: Maybe you’ve heard it before, maybe you haven’t. You are not alone because WE GO TOGETHER. WE (as in you and me, all of us in our MOPS group) GO TOGETHER with GOD through his son JESUS. I know I’m risking sounding cheesy when I say it, but I’m saying it: You are not alone. You are deeply loved by the savior of the word. And with him, YOU WILL NEVER BE ALONE.

WE GO TOGETHER.

This is a dark yet incredible world. Life is an adventure and it is glorious, blah, blah, blah. The truth is that life is indeed glorious but it can be so incredibly hard and sometimes downright painful and lonely. But friend, hope and heartache go hand in hand. I’ll say it again: Hope and heartache go hand in hand. Know why?

Jesus Christ died for you. Not just for the world collectively but for YOU personally, so that when you ask him in, his Holy Spirit, his Presence, will be with you wherever you go. He knows who you are, he knows where you’ve been, and where you’re going. He knows the very number of hairs on your head in the most non-creepy way possible. He is your biggest fan, your greatest advocate.

I know life is hard right now. 

SIDE NOTE #4: It’s been hard for me too. 

I thought 2020 was bad but 2022 has been an epic dumpster fire year. I’ve had so many “what’s the point of it all?” thoughts. I’m not ashamed to say it. But you know what? If anything this intense moment in time is reminding me that I am deeply loved, and I’m not alone. God is with me and I have a story to tell. You have a story to tell. Not every season is good but he is good. Despite what’s happened, he loves me. He loves you too. And he longs to reveal himself to you so you can go through life in hope, purpose and love and in great joy.

I’m no expert. I’m hardly what you’d call a mentor because I mess up all the time. I seldom have my act together. I can’t even hear well. But I know Jesus. I know him. There’s nothing you can do to add or take away what he did on the cross for you. He died for your sins to give you new life. Not just everlasting life in heaven but hope for here and now. To give you hope and strength and great joy for today because WE GO TOGETHER WITH THE VERY ONE WHO CREATED US.

SIDE NOTE 5: If you’d like to know more about God and this Jesus and the Holy Spirit, particularly if you’re curious about why I’m gushing over Jesus, I would love to walk along side you and answer your questions or pray with you. Any of us at MOPS would love to pray with you. Or maybe you’re having a hard time. We’re here for you, too, because WE GO TOGETHER.

PRAYER

P.S. SIDE NOTE #6: I forgot the prayer. Hailey had to pray before our breakfast portion of the meeting.

Categories // MOPS, Uncategorized Tags // MOPS, Motherhood

Undoing, Rebuilding

07.20.2017 by Nicole Kristin Twedt //

This summer is clearly not the time for me to devote myself to writing.  And that’s okay, except when it isn’t.  What I lack in writing time is made up for under under the Seattle summer sky with the Twedtlings.  Summer vacation has also been a time to work on Chloe’s Behavior Modification Plan For Anxiety.  That’s right, my little dog has a Behavior Modification Plan For Anxiety.  I won’t bore you with the details of why we even need a Behavior Modification Plan For Anxiety in the first place.  You’re welcome.

Actually, it’s a comfort to known that our dog, who hasn’t a care in the world other than wondering if she’ll be fed sometime around  7 a.m. and again at 5, struggles with anxiety.  So do I.  It’s freeing to say it out loud, and for certain, that Chloe’s anxiety is hardly an issue of not trusting God with life’s worries.  Not enough faith is hardly the point when you’re covered in fur, or silky hair if you are of the Havanese-variety like Chloe.

In the end, all it took was a stroll or two around our neighborhood with Chloe and a snack-size Ziplock baggie of carrot pieces, allotted every few houses or whenever we encountered a walker, biker, car or animal.  It’s a scary world out there, but our little dog is overcoming.  Greg rolls his eyes every time I turn to Chloe and say, “Chloe, you are a brave, brave doggie.”  But it’s enough to somewhat bring her through her funk.  There’s hope for us all.

I’m enjoying my time outside with the dog.  The Twedtlings are not.  Almost everyday during the school year we walked to and from our neighborhood elementary school, about a half-mile distance one way, with minimal complaining.  Or is it a quarter-mile?  I’m really not sure.  Distance has never been one of my strong points.  Yet our brief walks around the neighborhood are torture to them now. With our grey-blue rambler still in sight, you can hear from our little band of walkers: “Are we there yet?  Do we really have to do this?  It’s too hot?  Mom, is this what you’d call a scorcher?”  Spoken like true Seattleites.  We don’t know what to do with ourselves when outside temps finally hit the seventy-five degree mark.  No matter the weather or distance, Steven’s rants revolve around the iPhone I won’t let him have.  “Can I get a phone?  Why can’t I have a phone?  Everyone has a phone.  How about when I’m ten? thirteen?” This is the typical soundtrack of our kinda-sorta daily to twice-daily walks.

Chloe’s carrot-on-a-stick comes in a baggie, but the kids’ promised carrot is a stop at the Little Free Library two streets away and perfectly timed near the end of our walks to cheer them on and keep them going.  I’d walk for books, free or not, and so will they.

I’m not sure what’s up with walking, but something about it removes the fog in my mind and leads to reflection, stirring something deep within me. The splendid concoction of exercise and fresh air?  Probably.  Usually my deepest of deep thoughts are born out of a session of writing.  I’m sure you’ve picked up on the theme of my life: I write to discover what I’m thinking, feeling, learning. Yada yada.  I’m learning that walking, being outside, even playing the piano, all these activities, well, they also quiet my soul and help me make sense of God, myself and the world around me.  This summer has been lacking in writing time, but the thinking, the deep pondering, it’s happening anyway, especially during summer walks with the kids and Chloe.

I didn’t realize I was making a point but it’s clear to me now that God cannot be limited in how he chooses to speak to his children, even if he has worked a certain way in the past.  He has a knack for showing up whenever and wherever.  This revelation shouldn’t come as a surprise to me.  He’s God, after all.

This summer has also been the Summer of Reading, even book launches. You’ll hear more about these yet-to-be released-titles and how God is using them to speak to me when it’s time for me to write more about them.

Speaking of books, back in late May or early June, I met Lindsey in Bellevue.  Over chips and salsa and frozen fruity drinks, she told me about Sara Hagartey’s Every Bitter Thing is Sweet.  I don’t remember if I had the self-control to wait until the next morning to reserve Sara’s book from our local library, or if the book-junky side of me won out and put a hold on the book right then and there via Sno-Isle’s online library system.  I’d like to think I’m socially aware enough to wait, but once a book nerd, always a book nerd.  Either way, after a few day’s time, a text banner flashed across my iPhone screen announcing that Lindsey’s book recommendation was waiting for me on the hold shelf at the Mill Creek branch of our local library.

But I couldn’t read Every Bitter Thing is Sweet.  In fact, I waited the duration of three renew cycles before I picked it up, knowing deep down that something hidden in the words of the little blue book with the vintage bottle of honey on the cover would change me.  I’m a change-resister through and through. That or just plain stubborn.

Which brings me to a delicious summer morning in July, just after the Tiniest Tiny’s sixth birthday.  Emily and I were lounging around the family room in our PJs, my big girl on the love seat, I, curled up at the end of the matching burnt red-colored couch that used to be trendy but now is not, kind of like the entire decade of the 90s.  The other two played at the oak farm table in the dining room with their construction paper and Scotch tape creations.  Starbuck’s coffee tumbler of Tony’s French Royale Dark Roast in my right hand, book in my left, cream-colored throw blanket that’s unraveling (compliments of Steven) covered my morning-chilled body, little dog on lap, tears flowing.

You see, God always has something to say, to remind us of his presence, even when his presence seems to come out of nowhere.  Tears cascading down my cheeks, I’m reminded once again in Sara’s book that God is here and has a lot to say about undoing and rebuilding.  Sara writes about her early marriage but my mind makes a connection to another time and another place.

It’s an evening in early spring, not long ago.  I’m at Emily’s house in North Seattle for our Writer’s Connection Group. It’s just past 9 p.m.  I know the time because Kimberlee and Meagan had to leave by nine.  Emily is telling Kate and me about her project, Kindred Mom, and how motherhood is the place where she found herself.  I joke that motherhood has been my undoing. I’m trying my hand at comedic timing, but my statement is a confession all the same. Every day, the parenting struggle is real.  Each day, while mercies are new, so are opportunities fall short of my expectations, to fall on my face.  Like when I lose it in front of my children, especially my child who has special needs.  Parenting is not what I thought it would be.  I’m not who I thought I would be.

Undoing.  Rebuilding.

Random connections in the form of ADHD is a rare gift, and the message my heart is desperate for, as sappy as it sounds, breaks through like a radiant sunrise, the dawning of a new day.  And just like that, God gently or not-so-gently sweeps in and whispers to my soul that what I see as failure, what I view as my undoing, he sees a radical rebuilding.  What appears to be a disaster is simply the ongoing story of rebirth, of being brave when life is hard, a showcase of a life being transformed in real time by his grace and his great, great love.  Once again, his kingdom is an upside down kingdom.

This summer is clearly not a summer devoted to writing.  It’s going to be okay.

Categories // Anxiety, Being Brave, Family, Writing Tags // hope, Motherhood, Sara Hagarty, walking

Hygge

02.23.2017 by Nicole Kristin Twedt //

Originally a MOPS Mentor Moment, January 2017

I love words.  And I have a new favorite word to share with you.  I’m going to geek out a bit and introduce you to the Oxford Dictionaries’ 2016 word of the year: Hygge.  Hygge is a Danish practice that’s all about creating a warm atmosphere and enjoying the simple things in life with your people.  Instead of fighting against the colder months of the year, Hygge embraces them.  It’s the art of getting cozy in a difficult season.

Hygge is how I view motherhood.  The days are hard but filled with moments worth embracing.  The baby might be teething and the preschooler is having an epic meltdown, but we get to hold them in our arms and comfort them.  We won’t get to do this for long.   Just ask my now 10, 8 and 5-year-old.  They don’t want me to hold them.

Hygge reminds me of the verse “…Fix your thoughts on what is true, and honorable, and right and pure, and lovely, and admirable.  Think about things that are excellent and worthy of praise (Philippians 4:8b).”  Paul wasn’t talking about winter or motherhood when he wrote to the Philippians, I know.  But his letter reminds me to cling to the hidden gems throughout my days and hold onto them during challenging moments.  I urge you to gather your friends, perhaps a few from MOPS, and embrace this season of life instead of fight against it.

Originally, I was going to end this little hygge/motherhood analogy with the “whatever is lovely” verse, give a few examples of how you can get cozy with your kids, and call it a day.  But I need to add something.  It’s okay not to feel the love all the time and cherish every moment of the season.   There’s nothing pretty about projectile vomit.  Potty training is messy.  Tantrums in the middle of Costco are terrible, I know, I’ve been there.  And sometimes, we need to seek professional help or find a safe person to talk to before we can truly embrace the season.  And that’s okay, too.  Because this season you are in, the season of raising little ones, it’s hard work.

You also need to know that God is there.  He is there in the Costco aisle when your kid is screaming from the cart and you want to scream along with him.  True story.  He is there in the ungodly hour of 3 a.m. when your baby has her days and nights mixed up and you haven’t slept since you can’t remember when. He’s close enough to hear a whisper.  He hears your battle cry, and the wail of your broken heart.  He sees your silent tear before it falls.  He collects it in his bottle.  That’s actually a verse.  Psalm 56:8 says, “You keep track of all my sorrows.  You have collected all my tears in your bottle.  You have recorded each one in your book.”

I love the idea of Hygge, of getting cozy and embracing the season, especially the season of motherhood.  I loved having tiny ones in our home.  But if I’m honest, I have to say I’m a little shell-shocked from it all.  My husband and I have battle wounds from raising children, mostly from strong-willed toddlers and preschoolers.  I’m giving you permission to look for the lovely in mothering but also acknowledge the ugly because life with littles is filled with tender moments but it’s also very hard.  And it’s okay to say it out loud.

Lord, help us rise to the task of doing what you called us to do.  Help each mama here take notice of the glories along the way.  Help us know we are not alone and remind us to cry out to you for help.  Restore us so we can go from here, free to love and care for the little people and the big people you’ve given us.   In Jesus’s name, Amen.

Categories // Family, MOPS Tags // faith, hygge, MOPS, Motherhood, mothering

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