
Updated from last year’s post
Motherhood. Contrary to ridiculous claims otherwise, it starts with being a woman. Which starts with XX chromosomes and can never be changed.
It didn’t take God long at all in his creation process to get to the male, female, mother, and father part. I can see nothing confusing in his words. From Genesis, Chapter 1:
And he said: Let us make man to our image and likeness: and let him have dominion over the fishes of the sea, and the fowls of the air, and the beasts, and the whole earth, and every creeping creature that moveth upon the earth. 27 And God created man to his own image: to the image of God he created him: male and female he created them. 28 And God blessed them, saying: Increase and multiply, and fill the earth…
So, I am a woman, a wife, a mother, a grandmother. A daughter, daughter in law, sister, sister in law.
My pronouns are not she/her. I am a she. I am a her. I am his wife. I am Mom. I am a grandmother to six boys and three girls.
I was never a birthing person and I’ll probably smack you with my cast iron skillet if you call me one.
In dignity and love we women were created unique and with tremendous life bringing gifts by God the Father. You know, the Creator who identified himself, among many other things, as Father. Which gave meaning to what being a man, and a father, and a woman, and a mother, would all come to mean.
My identity comes from God Eternal. Truth. Unchanging.
Ladies, congratulations. Your were gifted from the moment of your creation with a share in God’s own life giving creative abilities. Celebrate who and what you are. Celebrate life, femininity, nurturing, love, and the ability to pair colors and patterns, carry two squirming kids under two years old, five grocery bags, a purse and diaper bag, and open the door without letting the dog in or the cat out.
Celebrate that you loved a man, also created in God’s image, enough to create that most precious and endangered of things, a family. It doesn’t matter whether your family is yours by blood or by love. I have nine grandchildren. Four are genetically related to me, but nine are mine.
Your family, your children, your grandchildren, and everyone else’s are under attack. Your motherhood is one of the biggest weapons against the evil coming against us. You have influence, respect, opportunity, and abilities. Use them for good in word and deed, in action and prayer. In faith, in hope, in love.
As a mother you learned early on, I hope, that love requires hard choices. It is not best for your crying baby to be given something just to shut him up. Your cranky toddler shouldn’t get to watch TV just because. Don’t buy your kid a toy every time you’re in a store. Teach even your little kids to work, and take care of themselves, according to age and ability.
And for goodness’ sake moms, a subject near to my heart, don’t be overprotective of those kids, especially teens, and especially boys. Men and women are meant to do hard things. We have to be survivors, we have to endure hard times, no money, illness, loss of work, and political madness.
Failures and troubles of all kinds are going to come fast and hard at your kids. Your job is NOT to protect them to the best of your ability. It is to prepare them to survive those hard knocks and failures on their own.
Every single time you remove the burden from the shoulders of your sons and daughters and place it on your own, you lessen them. Every time you try to stop your husband from making the kids, again, especially the sons, do something you are afraid of and nervous about, you interfere with his duty and gift of fatherhood.
Boys especially need dads to show them how to be men. To my way of thinking, and evidenced by the crap going on in the world, we have a serious problem with manhood in this world. People can throw out all kinds of causes, from women’s lib gone wild to trans and gay advocates taking over the mindset of weak people, to lack of moral and religious teaching in the home. Lots of others, most valid to varying degrees.
But I submit to you that nothing is more damaging to kids, and especially to boys (cut me some slack here, I only had boys!) than a mother who undermines the strength, power, leadership, and resolve of the father of her children. Encourage him when he’s hard on them. Stand united against the whines.
I have one particular well loved grandson whose default mode right now is sing song whiney. Whenever he comes to visit and asks me for something, a treat, a special privilege, whatever, I never give him a yes until he asks with a strong whine free voice. I digress, but it’s a good example!
Make them do the hard things. Show them how, encourage, lead, push, shove, but don’t do it for them. Your job is to raise your kids to fly the coop on their own, as wise as youth can be, as strong and untested life can be at that first foray into the world. To do those things with hope, confidence, and the strength of doing things for themselves.
Never bail them out of failure. Cry your mama tears behind your bedroom door when they fail, but let them fail. And get back up. And fail.
I have come to believe that one of my most important jobs was letting go and not stopping my sons’ failures, just as much as celebrating their successes. It’s still sometimes hard to do that now that they are grown.
One of my sons recently made a comment about a boy’s failure at a certain undertaking. His observation was that the boy had done everything asked of him and nothing above that, which guaranteed his failure.
It was a very proud moment for my husband, and for me. That’s the kind of boy he was, and the kind of man he is, and the kind of father he is.
Each of my sons learned to do the hard things early on in life. One of them has three children, two with autism. He’s a wonderful and loving father to them, but he does not see their autism as an excuse for them to do less than every thing they are capable of, and then more.
Another other son refuses to abandon his step children in the face of barriers, blocks, and hardship after a divorce. Because he knows those kids need him more than ever, and he loves them. Lots of biological fathers would quit.
I am proud of my boys. They did not get those great strengths from a protected childhood. I could never have been that strong on my own. My husband taught me to let them fall, to let them hurt, to help but never do for them.
Although I never had the responsibility and blessing of having a daughter, I’d like to add something here about parenting girls as well. We now have a twelve year old granddaughter, and right now, that sometimes seems harder than raising all three sons! Hats off to all of you who have raised those stubborn, dramatic, hardheaded, beautiful young ladies.
Circumstances in our family, especially the autism of her two younger brothers, have us often involved in helping out with these three grandchildren, especially since I homeschool her brother.
As we strive to help her through pre-teen travails, I am also keeping in mind the examples of the many women I’m seeing today, and not liking it. At all. From the protestors on college campuses to the women who lead Ivy League schools, and those who are business leaders and politicians, I am not seeing much I feel good about in the news.
Many women seem to have lost their way, and further, for reasons I’m not wise enough to explain, society in general has let them drive the train full speed toward the cliffs too often. We parents and grandparents have a mighty task ahead of us, helping our precious girls find their gifts, strengths, kindness, and beauty in the midst of so many terrible examples and pressures.
Today, as we offer you heartfelt good wishes on this Mother’s Day, I tell you, your job isn’t done. Be strong, be an example, and encourage the young parents in your own family to do the hard things. A lot of things, most things, that are wrong in this world started with bad parenting. They need to be fixed the same way.
Almost every day here at the Treehouse people ask what they can do to fix the problems in our country specifically, and the world generally.
My own answer is to be the best mother and grandmother you can be. Just like childhood requires perseverance in the face of struggle and failure, so too does motherhood. Be strong. Be tough. Don’t quit.
You’ll never get the thanks and recognition you deserve and even if you did, you know that’s not what you want. You want the best of life and love and hope and eternity for your kids and family. Fortunately, you have a mighty, mighty power over the outcome. And you will, until the day you die.
The world needs you to use it.
Well said, thank you. I’ll be re-posting. All you mothers enjoy your special day.
Yes, very wise words. Thank you dear Menagerie. 😘
This father of sons and grandsons appreciates your posts immensely.
Cheers!
Amen to all your words of wisdom, Menagerie!!
I too, raised boys, who are now strong and successful men, but yet, there is a part of them that will always be the little boys who snuggled against me in the night as they fell asleep nursing. They don’t remember and I would never embarrass them by bringing it up but I am forever thankful to God for the honor and privilege of the gift of being their mother!
My mother did not consider herself creative, although she had her moments. She was a biology major at Wellesley and William Smith, and she earned a library science degree at Syracuse U. She did not take after her mother, an art school graduate, who sewed and painted and designed her own stencils. When I was a little kid and wanted to know how to sew, it was my mother who sat with me on the living room floor with some scraps of material, buttons, a needle and thread, and figured out how to make a chemise for my Ginny doll. Ginny is long gone, but I still have that chemise she helped me sew. Mom died 18 years ago. Mom, you really were creative. Trust me.
I can see the love between you in this picture ❤️
Wonderful memories💕
That is beautiful.
What am absolutely wonderful (precious) memory to share; with proof!
Look at those stitches 🤗
Boy, did you use it — too!!
A treasure .
Simple stitches can go a long way and can last a lifetime. The proof is here, and what a treasure. 💗👩🏻🦰👩🏻🦳👱🏻♀️💃🏻🪡🧵(having fun with emojis)
That is the sweetest story. Thank you for blessing all of us with it.
My Mom used to make dresses for us girls (three — oldest five years older than the youngest, and middle sister two years younger than the oldest). She would dress the oldest girls in a style exactly the same with different colored fabric and mine as a really, really little girl (and my favorite dress) was white with red velvetine polka dots. I cried the next year when it was too small for me!
I marvel that she found the time to do any of that sewing. She had eight kids — 5 boys, 3 girls. It was a wild time in and outside at that house! She would send us outside in all kinds of weather (not storms) in winter, spring, summer and fall. I’m sure that saved her sanity! LOL!
Happy Mother’s Day Menagerie and to all the moms in the Treeper Family.
Happy Mother’s Day
You are the BEST
The Best Mothers Day sermon Ever. Thank You.
Beautifully written.Thank you so much.
Thank you, Menagerie. Another reflection belted over the fence!
Menagerie posts wisdom for the ages here. Thanks for posting this. God makes a vessel of all of us if we allow it. I think I will go thank my wife now.
When my dad brought home an old style bike I had to try hard not to cry. He said these were the best kind. I looked at my mom and went in my room dejected. How could I ride with my pals on that thing. Next day she said get in the car and drove me to the Schwinn shop. She bought me the 15 speed mettalic blue beauty. She took a big commotion for spending all that money but it raised my stature at school which was her goal. There were many more examples of her getting the best she could for me and spent the money happily to support me. Unconditional love and support is the most valuable thing that exists and that was my mom.
Sometimes moms override dads at just the right moments 🥰
Beautiful story.
My first born is the mother of twin lads and a daughter who is excellent in volleyball among other talents. She tried out for a team and was accepted, but these require a sizeable investment. My daughter so wanted this for my 15 year old granddaughter but with the twins headed to college at the same time it was going to put a strain on her finances…
She was talking about this to me and said, “Mom, I’ll make it work even if I have to sell a kidney!”
And she did…
And still has both of hers 😁
Lord love your mom, desertson. What a lovely and telling story about how shed move heaven and earth because she knew that bike was important to you.
Thank you Menagerie. This is beautiful, have sent it to the mothers in our family. God Bless You!
Thank you! Forwarded this to my daughter in CA, mother of three boys, two with Childhood Apraxia of Speech. She’s pretty much an overly protective, helicopter mom. (I don’t tell her this…) Carry on!!!
Happy Mother’s Day, moms.
A tribute to a mother:
🌷 Happy Mother’s Day to every one of our Treehouse Moms🌷
I know there are brothers and sisters here whose moms are in the arms of the Lord. Those precious souls have merely gone ahead, as moms do, and will welcome you once again one day in the Paradise and presence of God. A joyful reunion awaits💕
Blessings I pray for all 🙏🏻
That was my Mom.
We were the working poor, and I can’t count the number of times that there wasn’t enough and she did without.
God bless Moms!
My interaction with “Mother” was the worst possible scenario. Lucky to have survived it. When I became a mother, I failed over and over and over again because I had no experience with what a good caretaker should be. All the awful things I went through from infancy to adulthood, I thought that was normal.
I was a failure as a mother, but my children were a success through no fault of mine. All 4 graduated from college with advanced degrees, all 4 are good and decent and honest human beings. I lucked out and certainly do not deserve this wealth.
I think they understood the love and good intentions.
You did the best you could, Patty. That’s all any of us can do.
Do NOT call yourself a failure.
From my heart to yours 💕
Four successes
-plus one.
You done good
– after all.
sounds like you are a sister from another mother,,,mine would remove her cigarette from her mouth, narrow her eyes, then pounce, verbally and physically,,,,,the horrible thing is, my dad, my aunts and uncles, my grandparents and my great grandparents would not stop her, years later, one of my aunts told me that as long as mom was beating on me, she wasn’t beating on them, and they were ok with that,,,,,,,,,I grew up normal though, and have lived a normal life, but it took good friends mothers to show me, I was fortunate
God bless you for your efforts.
You were better than you knew, and you had the Lord on your side.
He stepped in to help out whenever you didn’t know what to do.
He does that for lots of us!
Thank you for writing this. I will send it to family and friends. Hopefully, they will send it on to those they love I’m glad I raised tough kids. 💟💟
Beautiful.
Thank you for this, Menagerie!
Nation’s Husbands Announce They’re Just Going To Let The Dishes Soak For A While
https://babylonbee.com/cleanArticle/nations-husbands-announce-theyre-just-going-to-let-the-dishes-soak-for-a-while
One of my EFT clients was processing her emotional trauma from years of disrespectful treatment in the marriage, when the events around her emptying the kitchen came up.
Her husband and his hunting buddy butchered their kills and left all the dirty equipment & mess in the kitchen for her to clean up. She did clean it up – and she took every dish, cup, utensil, pot, pan, and piece of cooking/eating equipment out to her car and drove it to storage – the kitchen was as bare as a house vacant of occupants.
She did not cook or wash a utensil, cup, or dish, or buy groceries, for a full year; she fed herself on her way to & from work, requiring entitled husband to similarly fend for himself. He was indignant.
When she decided to return the kitchen to functioning, she said he left no more messes for her to clean up.
I admired her creative solution to her overwhelm in the moment – and it still makes me smile a long time later.
Bravo to her!
🤣 🤣 🤣 🤣
Never give up; never stop praying; love, pray, trust God, love some more. God bless and thank you for sharing these insights and encouragement.
God Bless You Sundance on this your special day!!!!!
Happy Mother’s day ❣️💟💕🌸🙏🏼
I don’t have a son. I’d like to point out some things I noticed from a friend with three boys, who lived out in the country.
Boys have more accidents and injuries and trips to the emergency room.
My friend whose boys had a wide range of dangerous outdoor activities to choose from (a pond on the property, three wheelers and dirt bikes when they got older, yes, even guns) had the same or fewer trips to the emergency room as kids who had none of those things. Keeping kids too safe has diminishing returns. They don’t think about their own personal safety.
So few grasp (any more) that THE goal of parents and the awsome responsibility is to, in all ways PREPARE their children to leave the nest, which just as you say means NOT shielding them from the unpleasent challeges of life, it means instilling in them the qualities to withstand and overcome them.
They don’t prepare their children and so end up with the kid living in the basement, at 27 y.o.
So agree!!!! I often get misty thinking that my 5 kids don’t “NEED” me or check in like they used to. Then I think…… I raised them RIGHT. They flew the nest ready to go. That is all that we are tasked to do. Prepare them for independent adulthood. In this regard, their father and I did a fine job. We waited until they were all grown to separate because of his decades of infidelities.
We DO walk down wedding aisles together. Go to family parties together, hang out with grands together. We are family no matter if it didn’t end in happily ever after. The raising of children is the most important thing anyone can do in this lifetime. I have a plaque hanging in the kitchen….
A Hundred Years From Now
it will not matter what my bank account was, the sort of house I lived in, or the kind of car I drove.
but the world may be different because I was important in the life of a child.
Happy Mother’s Day all!!
Ps. Gunnar is my son who died 30 yrs ago. I can still see his smile.
Parents will disagree. ALWAYS do so away from the children, never take the children’s side in any way over the other parent.
A father of three warned me about that. He once told his children, after their mother had forbidden something, that Mommy was kind of tired and she might change her mind later. Yuge mistake. They will NEVER stop trying to play one parent against the other.
My brother would never let his boys quit anything. He thought that was very important.
God bless mothers everywhere. I learned a lot about living from the farm girl who raised me. She packed a lot of life into her near nine decades. 🙂

What everyone else said, but I particularly liked the cast iron skillet part.
It took my son ten years to finish college. He attended, then didn’t, then resumed studies, then quit. He is now a highly respected attorney with an organization I can’t mention here. Please note I said “respected” rather than “successful.” They don’t always go hand-in-hand, as we know from observing the antics of the DC crowd:)
In this year’s Mother’s Day card, my son wrote the following: “Thank you for being there every day with exactly what I needed at the time.” What he didn’t need to state was that sometimes “being there” called for “tough love.” Yes, he got his share of that. You don’t create something wondrous but then let it deteriorate.
I know that my son is living his best life and, by extension, so are my grandchildren. As a mom fighting a really bad diagnosis, I can honestly say that even if I leave this earth earlier than planned, I will leave it knowing I managed to raise a really fine human being.
And I have made sure he knows that.
Adjust your crown, Fionnagh. It truly suits the head it is on 💕🙏🏻
Hah, thank you for that, but my angels would say, “Quit polishing your halo!”
LOL!!! 😘
Edited to say, dear lady, do not hide your light under a bushel 😉
A mother’s arms are made of tenderness and children sleep soundly in them.
Victor Hugo
also the writer of “les miserables” …or as the decadent corrupt elite Hillary would propose: “the deplorables”
a woman of false notoriety…the originalist of nothing..a shart shot in a corner no one cares to spend any time.
we live in an age of such magnificent thinkers and minds.
we MUST return to the age where intelligence and righteous cause is respected.
otherwise.? doom.
God Bless America
“we MUST return to the age where intelligence and righteous cause is respected.”
I agree. Right now I am reading about Boris Pasternak and his writing of his novel Dr Zhivago. But this topic is meant for discussion at another time, not for today.
HAPPY MOTHER’S DAY TO ALL MOMS, and to many single women who gave their lives to teaching, thus having many children of their own.
Ooops, had to edit the book title with italics.
What a beautil post Menagerie!
Thank you so much for this, it is exctly what I needed.
Happy Mother’s Day Menagerie..:0)
Happy Mother’s Day!
TRUTH – in celebration of Motherhood…
“The hand that rocks the cradle rules the world.”
This is why Motherhood has been disrupted in every way possible… by the usurpers.
On reproduction
by Robbie Davis-Floyd and Sarah Franklin
This article appears in the Sage Encyclopedia of Anthropology, Sage Publications, 2005.
“Reproduction” in anthropology refers to the processes by which new social members are produced — specifically, the physiological processes of conception, pregnancy, birth, and child-raising. In its larger sense, “reproduction” is used to encompass the processes by which societies are reproduced for the future. The term is thus fraught with biological, cultural, and political meanings; power is a central focus in reproductive studies, as those who have the power to influence the process of reproduction can control large populations for better or for worse.”
{ http://www.davis-floyd.com/sages-reproduction/ }
{ Articles on Midwives and Midwifery (8) }AND
{ Articles on Pregnancy and Birth (12) }Taking back our autonomy and agency in childbirth and childrearing is reclaiming the SuperNatural power inherent in Motherhood
Happy Mother’s Day
Mother’s day is not a happy day for many of us.
Just saying.
Agree. My oldest daughter says she is a mother now (of 3) so it is her Mother’s Day. That means it does not include me usually. She has a controlling husband who runs the show – a lot of alcohol is involved too. They live 1 1/2 hours away from us but close to his mom and sister. They see them all the time and on most holidays including today. We are used mainly to watch the grandchildren when they go away on trips.
His mom does not do overnight babysitting.
My youngest who is in early 30s stopped talking to us. I tried so many times to do things with her but she always had plans. We have tried to talk with her so many times, to no avail. She does see my oldest daughter and grandchildren, though.
So no, Mother’s Day is not a happy day. I have a milestone birthday coming up next month and the oldest said she was coming but then said no. She is going to the beach for a week with neighbors that she sees all the time. They will be two hours away from us. We found out my son-in-law picked the week of my birthday to go away for the past three years. They go on multiple beach vacations and trips throughout the year.
If you are blessed with family, enjoy them and don’t ever take it for granted. Spend as much time with them as you can.
Sad.
To borrow from Shakespeare, a serpent’s tooth is very sharp. I am so dreadfully sorry.
This is heartbreaking on so many levels. There is always hope. Love and prayers.
Oh no. I hate to hear this. My middle girl stopped talking to me 15 yrs ago. Reason unknown. I almost gave up. Never give up. I was so distraught for years on how to rectify the relationship. Funny thing.
I always take the high road no matter what. Birthday cards, Christmas cards, congratulation cards, etc. , even though I haven’t gotten Mother’s Day, birthday, Christmas acknowledgements in YEARS!!!!!!
I got it in my mind that I was going to suck it up yet again, but in a different way. I sent each of my 5 adult kids a real blooming olive tree. The card attached said,” I was looking for an olive branch to fix what we have going. Couldn’t find one, so I’m sending a whole olive tree. Love you”…………We mom’s have to suck up a lot of crap.
I have had the most wonderful cards and plants, and invitations to visit this spring. My heart is overjoyed. Please don’t be so proud to discount whatever they have going. My success at this point may be a let down in the future, but I’ll take it. Don’t give up. Never give up.
I’m sorry to hear that. Will keep you in my prayers.
Love that picture.
Brand new song: Mama
Singer Kim Walker-Smith Joins WarRoom To Discuss New Anthem For Moms | Listen To “Mama” Today
By Bannons War Room
11 may 2024
https://rumble.com/v4ujllo-singer-kim-walker-smith-joins-warroom-to-discuss-new-anthem-for-moms-listen.html
Happy Mother’s Day to all the wonderful moms here!
We crowned St. Mary yesterday in Ironton. It is a Catholic tradition to crown St. Mary for Mother’s Day, as she is the Mother of God.
I told my kids that if they could lay their heads on their pillow at night knowing that they had done their best, no matter what anyone else said, they had a good day.
Good…very good…counsel, Cherp.
We added to ours “never take criticism from anyone you would never take advice from.”
Also, like the man or woman who stares back when you in the mirror.
Amen
God bless great lady…
We have raised two young ladies – 24 and 19 – the elder was a perfect child and now a good mother. The youngest is proof that the human mind isn’t fully developed until 25. That said she is honest, ethical, and a very hard worker. It has been a wild and mostly fun ride.
Mom saved this clip and it describes who she was.
Down to the tractor seat…
HAPPY MOTHER’S DAY to all you awesome moms!!
From…

TOUCHÉ!
Well said Menagerie!
Irrefutable.
Inarguable (although too many still try).
Blessed be our mothers, and all mothers dedicated to fulfilling their God-given unique gift of motherhood – biologically or spiritually or both!
❤️ ❤️ ❤️ ❤️ ❤️
Menagerie – Thank you so very much for these heartfelt words. I totally agree with everything you’ve said. So much so, that I have shared your message with mothers and fathers – friends, family & acquaintances – of mine. Blessings to you – and wishing you a very Happy Mother’s Day!!!!
Well stated!!
Thank you for the wonderful reminder, Miss Menagerie. 🙂
So beautifully said, Menagerie. Happy Mother’s/Grandmother’s Day
In the 1980s when Dynasty was on and the whole Carrington family was living in the same house I used to say “Oh how I wish that would to us – we all will live together here” (we had a good sized house). Well, life had it’s usual twists and turns – many of them scary and difficult and less than a year ago I lost my husband. But – strangely, due to unexpected circumstances, I am now living with both my kids as well as son in law and his son. I feel incredibly lucky to not be alone. My son will move on in a few months but for now it’s great. My dream come true. 🙂
Happy Mother’s Day Menagerie!
And thank you for such a Beautiful post! 🙂
If it were not for my Mother’s prayers, I and my siblings would never have made it passed our twenties. The number of times I almost, or should have died are many. My siblings say the same. It was a woman of the Word, my Mother, the wife of my Father who taught me God’s love and knelt with me when I prayed and asked Jesus to be my Lord as a youth.
Some claim that the age of accountability is later than when I prayed. I say it’s different for each individual. It’s not an age, but an understanding of what God gave us through His Son. To those who say “no”, you were too young, I say I still remember the sin that made me feel guilty. If not for Godly parents, and a Godly Mother, I would not be here, and I would not know my Savior. Well done Mom!!! You fulfilled His will in my life for that time. Thank you!
There is a famous saying that goes something like “behind every successful man, is a strong woman”. That statement is so true, but it is even more true for the believing wife who lovingly corrects her husbands bad behavior. Yes, I’ve needed correction at times, 48 years so far, and I still do. I thank God for my wife, and for her boldness to tell me when I’m not being the person God created me to be.
Today, we honor our Mothers, and today I took time to do so with my 96 year old Mother. I also honor my wife, the Mother of my children for her unselfish commitment to our boys, and to me.
Thank you women!