Welcome
to
Pearl
Girls™
Mother
of
Pearl
Mother's
Day
blog
series
-‐
a
week
long
celebration
of
moms
and
mothering.
Each
day
will
feature
a
new
post
by
some
of
today's
best
writer's
(Tricia
Goyer,
Sheila
Walsh,
Suzanne
Woods
Fisher,
Bonnie
St.
John,
and
more).
I
hope
you'll
join
us
each
day
for
another
unique
perspective
on
Mother's
Day.
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Day
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Girls.
And
to
all
you
MOMS
out
there,
Happy
Mother's
Day!
What
I
Didn't
Know
by
Rhonda
Shrock
I
always
knew
I
wanted
to
be
a
mother.
As
a
girl,
I
played
house
with
my
dollies,
shushing
them
when
they
cried
and
kissing
their
plastic
heads.
Looking
back
at
that
girl,
I
realize
now
that
there
was
a
lot
she
didn't
know.
This
morning
over
my
fresh-‐ground
coffee,
this
mother
of
22-‐1/2
years
scratched
out
a
list
of
10
things
she
didn't
know
then
that
she
knows
now.
1.
I
didn't
know
-‐
how
could
I?
-‐
just
how
completely
a
tiny,
helpless
scrap
of
humanity
can
capture
the
heart
and
hold
it
forever.
From
that
first
whooshing
heartbeat
and
the
first
butterfly
brushes,
a
mother's
heart
is
never
again
her
own.
For
all
eternity,
it
enlarges,
walking
and
pulsing
and
moving
outside
of
her
body;
in
my
case,
in
the
shape
of
a
blue-‐eyed
boy
with
rooster
tails.
Times
four.
2.
I
didn't
know
that
the
size
of
a
mother's
heart
is
always
changing,
stretching
to
embrace
each
new
baby
that
comes,
then
growing
again
to
love
their
friends
and
then
their
own
families.
3.
I
never
knew,
as
I
changed
my
dolly's
dress,
how
many
reasons
there
are
to
worry
when
you're
a
mama.
Didn't
know
about
the
nighttime
vigils.
Didn't
know
the
anxiety
of
separation,
the
terror
that
floods
when
you
turn
around
in
the
grocery
store
and
they're
gone.
Didn't
know
about
the
fear
of
the
pond
next
door
or
the
concern
that
pays
for
swimming
lessons.
Didn't
know
the
thousand-‐and-‐one
reasons
that
keep
a
mother
awake,
whispering
prayers
on
her
pillow
in
the
dark.
4.
No
one
told
me
that
loving
so
much
means
that
you
will
hurt
hard
and
keen;
that
what
pains
your
child
hurts
you
even
worse.
I
didn't
know
then
that
a
playground
taunt
travels
through
that
smaller
heart
and
lands
square
in
yours,
stinging
and
burning
like
fire.
I
didn't
know
that
motherhood
makes
lionesses
of
us
all
and
that
there'd
be
days
I'd
have
to
bite
my
tongue
and
pray
to
not
sin.
5.
I
didn't
know
how
exhausting
it
is,
being
a
mother.
I
didn't
know
that
it
takes
everything
you've
got
and
then
some.
Didn't
know
the
bone-‐deep
exhaustion;
how
it
strips
you
bare
and
shows
how
selfish
you
can
be,
but,
too,
that
you
have
more
strength
than
you
know.
6.
I
didn't
know,
playing
house,
how
much
joy
mothers
feel;
joy
so
big
that
it
makes
up
for
the
pain.
Just
looking
at
those
eyes
and
the
curve
of
the
cheek
can
make
you
so
happy
it
hurts.
Watching
them
grow
and
find
their
talent
and
win
at
something...all
the
money
in
the
world
can
never
buy
that
kind
of
happiness.
7.
I
didn't
know
how
making
babies
and
raising
them,
how
it
binds
you
to
their
father.
I
didn't
know
the
intimacy
you
feel
when
your
eyes
meet
above
those
tousled
heads,
and
your
smiles
say,
"Just
look
at
what
we've
done."
8.
That
girl
in
the
homemade
dress,
she
didn't
know
that
letting
go
is
one
of
the
hardest
things
a
grown-‐up
mama
will
ever
do.
Rocking
those
babies
in
that
small
rocking
chair,
she
didn't
really
know
that
babies
grow
up
and
walk
away
and
there
goes
your
heart,
out
into
the
big,
wide
world.
No
one
told
her
that
part.
9.
I
had
no
idea
how
rewarding
it
is,
being
a
mother.
How
the
happiness
that
comes
from
boy
kisses
and
awkward
hugs
can't
be
bought
or
sold.
How
proud
you
feel
when
you
see
what
they're
growing
up
to
be
and
that
all
the
planting
and
pruning
and
watering
and
feeding
is
finally
making
fruit!
10.
I
didn't
know
how
much
my
babies
would
enrich
my
spiritual
life
or
how
they
would
change
the
way
I
pray.
I
didn't
realize
they
would
lead
me
to
a
deeper
dependence
on
the
Heavenly
Father
or
how
I
much
I
would
need
His
wisdom
to
raise
them
aright.
These
are
things
I
didn't
know
before
I
was
a
mother.
But
I
know
them
now.
Oh,
how
I
know
them
now!
And
I’d
do
it
all
again.
Rhonda
Schrock
lives
in
Northern
Indiana
with
her
husband
and
4
sons,
ages
22,
18,
13,
and
5.
By
day,
she
is
a
telecommuting
medical
transcriptionist.
In
the
early
morning
hours,
she
flees
to
a
local
coffee
shop
where
she
pens
“Grounds
for
Insanity,”
a
weekly
column
that
appears
in
The
Goshen
News.
She
is
an
occasional
guest
columnist
in
The
Hutch
News.
She’s
also
blogged
professionally
for
her
son’s
school
of
choice,
Bethel
College,
in
addition
to
humor
and
parenting
blogs,
and
maintains
her
personal
blog,
“The
Natives
are
Getting
Restless.”
She
is
a
writer
and
editor
for
the
magazine,
"Cooking
&
Such:
Adventures
in
Plain
Living."
She
survives
and
thrives
on
prayer,
mochas,
and
books.
Exciting
News
–
the
latest
Pearl
Girls
book,
Mother
of
Pearl:
Luminous
Legacies
and
Iridescent
Faith
will
be
released
this
month!
Please
visit
the
Pearl
Girls
Facebook
Page
(and
LIKE
us!)
for
more
information!
Thanks
so
much
for
your
support!
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