Peace & Contentment


Life doesn’t ease up. It stomps in, tosses your schedule out the window, and pelts you with responsibilities like you’re stuck in a game of dodgeball. Between the chaos and the fleeting joy, we all try to stay on our feet—gritty, bruised, and somehow still smiling.

As the school year kicks off for both my kids and me, I find myself mentally juggling flaming swords. I work in the bustling heart of a school, where I wear more hats than a Broadway costume rack. Technically, I’m admin. Realistically, I’m everyone’s go-to, fix-it-all person. While I love helping, the sheer volume of “can you just…” moments wears me down. And truthfully, while I thrive on being a support system, I often wish for someone to tag in and support me back.

Most days I stumble out of work looking like I’ve been through a full-contact sport. Then it’s a mad dash to a school function, sports game, or meeting. My husband and I ping-pong between obligations, slapping together dinner like it’s a timed cooking challenge. It’s not just the logistics—it’s the stress of trying to hold it all together with a smile. And yet, we do it. We show up. Because love is a wild kind of fuel.

I’m grateful—truly—for my husband. I couldn’t do this without him. Together, we carry the weight, weather the storms, and somehow keep the wheels on. There’s an unspoken pact between us: no matter how exhausting or thankless it gets, we’re in this together. It’s not about keeping score—it’s about keeping us strong.

But let’s be real: contentment sometimes feels like a unicorn around here. It shows up in rare flashes, then bolts off before we can grab it. Our kids grow hungrier—for attention, for stuff, for more—and my husband pushes harder to meet their needs. In the process, he grows weary, distanced, even a bit lost. He longs to provide and be fulfilled, but often ends up drained and feeling unseen.

And when he’s not okay, I feel it too. His restlessness ripples through our home. The heaviness he carries doesn’t stay on his shoulders—it echoes into mine. I miss him. I ache for the peace he’s chasing and wish I could hand it to him, gift-wrapped in stillness.

I’ve glimpsed peace, here and there, usually in the quiet moments—book in hand, dog by my side, no chaos in sight. I find joy in simplicity: stillness, family, the soft hum of home. My husband, on the other hand, is wired for motion. He dreams big, seeks more, craves change. While he pushes forward, I hold the ground. I thought he was my anchor, but really—I’m his.

We’re opposites, sure. But our love? That’s our common ground. It binds us tighter than chaos can unravel. It’s what gets us through late nights, early mornings, and endless to-do lists. We believe—truly believe—that we were divinely matched. Our faith grounds us, reminding us that love isn’t just a feeling. It’s a force.

So here’s the question I keep circling back to: can we find contentment in the peace we’ve built together? Can we allow that to be enough?

Maybe it already is.

— SK

motherhood, family, faith, stories
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4 responses to “Peace and Contentment”

  1. Greg Dennison Avatar

    That was beautiful… 🙂

    “Yet, it’s not just about us parents and the Herculean effort required to juggle these responsibilities; it’s about the stress that accompanies it all. But here’s the thing—we do it willingly, out of love and care for our children.” Yes, this. It makes me sad, even angry, how so many people, especially among the younger generation, don’t want children because they want to party and sleep in and not be responsible for anyone else and they just hate children in general. I don’t want to tell anyone how to live their life, but that kind of life just sounds so empty to me, in the long run. I have a lot more thoughts about that, especially vis-a-vis the path my own life has taken, but that probably isn’t something I should share in a comment.

    1. fabricthatmademe Avatar

      I really appreciate this. I have found myself resentful at times for my blessings. The thought of these gift being taken away is far worse than then the exhausting, I feel trying to meet the demands under all the pressure. Instead, I have decided to think of things in a different way. Humbling myself to Gods purpose for me and in that I have found a new sense of freedom.

  2. patiencehickey Avatar

    From Nairobi Kenya, i love your skill of writing its inspiring, i see passion here.

    1. fabricthatmademe Avatar

      Thank you! I’m always working on it!

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