How a Woman Truly Can “Have It All”

A few nights ago my husband and I were watching the evening, national news as we do most nights, and the age-old question of whether women truly can “have it all” came up once again in a feature story.

It is interesting to me how often this question continues to come up and how researchers continue to look for an answer.

In this particular news story the dilemma was the extend to which women are trying to have it all by taking prescription drugs to keep their bodies energetic and able to accomplish more tasks within in a day. And then of course how damaging the effects are to their bodies.

We will do anything to prove of self-worth, won’t we?

Photo Credit: Creative Commons: Vestman

I am no different from these women who fall into the trap of trying to prove their self-worth by attempting to do it all.

Now as I embark on motherhood for the first time, I feel this tension even more than I ever have before.

I remember the best advice my mom ever gave me: “You can have it all, but you can’t have it all at the same time”. Sometimes, however, having it all at the same time seems nonnegotiable.  Sometimes I feel like I don’t have a choice. The demands around me make me have to have it all even if I don’t want it all.

Then I begin envying women who do have it all. They accomplish their daily responsibilities and still have time for the fun stuff. What about them?

The closer I really examine lives of women around me who seem to have it all, and whom I envy, I realize that in fact, they don’t have it all.

They had to pick and choose, and their all is different from my all. 

If your “having it all” is:

  • volunteering at your child’s school
  • leading a small group at church
  • baking homemade goodies
  • working full-time
  • working out every day
  • spending time with God in Bible study and prayer every day
  • having coffee dates with your girlfriends
  • cooking homemade meals every night
  • keeping your home organized and clean
  • running a business
  • homeschooling
  • blogging
  • coaching your child’s soccer team
  • doing homework with your child each night
  • spending quality time with your husband

then no, you cannot have it all.

But women can have it all if they determine what their “all” is truly supposed to be. 

Maybe my all isn’t volunteering at school or cooking homemade meals. Maybe I’m not supposed to lead a Bible study right now or maybe I have to limit my coffee dates with girlfriends.

My all is going to look different from your all, and your all is going to look different from my all. And we have to be o.k. with that.

And we have to support the differences in each other’s all.

One way to accomplish this is to ask God to show us what He desires our individual all to be. What has He gifted us to do? What is He wanting us to accomplish? Then, we have to stay so focused on those tasks, knowing that they came from God, that we do not feel guilty or envious or exhausted because our all doesn’t look like the girl next door’s all.

We have to determine our own all.

What is your “all” at this season of your life? How do you not feel guilty or envious when your all isn’t your friends’ all?

 

 

This week I am linked up with:

Comments

14 responses to “How a Woman Truly Can “Have It All””

  1. Jenni Avatar
    Jenni

    My mom has always said exactly the same thing. Thanks for the great reminder.

    1. Brenda Avatar

      It’s funny how our moms told us this, but so many women still try to literally have all of it – the whole list. We need to listen to our moms more! 🙂 

  2. Seashore Avatar

    So true.  This helps me put in to perspective what I really want in my life.  

    1. Brenda Avatar

      I am so glad! It’s something I have to remind myself of often! 🙂 

  3. Jenni Mullinix Avatar

    Wise words! I’m posting something along similar lines for Thrive at Home Thursday. I would love it if you would link this up then. 🙂

    1. Brenda Avatar

      Jenni, yes!! Absolutely! 🙂 Thank you for telling me about it!

  4. Lyli@3dLessons4Life Avatar

    Great post!  I think we will never quite have it “all” until we reach heaven.  In the meantime, I agree with you that I need to pray and ask God where to focus my attention. 

    1. Brenda Avatar

      Yes, that is so true! Heaven is where the “all” is! I have to remember that! 

  5. KarenYates11 Avatar

    It’s so strange to me the movement of having it all.  NONE of us can have it all.  We make choices, men, women, dads, moms.  Some of our choices are dictated by circumstance, and that is frustrating!  But it’s also real life.   There are times when I am jealous of my friends and what they accomplish or their talents, but those are usually unhealthy moments where envy and comparison and insecurity take hold of my heart.  When I’m really rooted and confident in who God made me to be (and what He made me to do) I feel such joy.  SUCH.  It goes back to ‘draw near to God and he will draw near to you.’  He’s just waiting for us to hang out with him. 

    1. Brenda Avatar

      Karen, there is so much wisdom in your words! I struggle most with the choices I have to make out of circumstances that I don’t think are the best or ideal. Sometimes I wish I could trade some parts of my all for other parts. 🙂 

  6. Glenda Childers Avatar
    Glenda Childers

    This is an important discussion for women of all ages. My mom always taught me that when I say “no” to something, I say “yes” to something else and visa versa. This idea has helped me to be more intentional.

    1. Brenda Avatar

      That is great advice, and so true! I need to remember it like that! 

  7. moretobe Avatar
    moretobe

    I love this perspective that you’ve given us, for you set us free to be who God intended…not doing all nor being all at any given time…but simply doing and being what He’s called us to in that moment.  Thanks!

    1. Brenda Avatar

      Thank you for reading and sharing your thoughts!! 🙂

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