I used to think Mother’s Day would feel different by now.

I imagined a season where the seeds I planted for years would begin to bloom in obvious ways. I thought there would come a point where the sacrifices would feel easier to measure. A season where I could look around and clearly see the fruit of all the prayers, the long nights, the intentional conversations, the hard decisions, and the years spent pouring myself into my children.

I thought this stage of motherhood would feel more settled, but if I’m honest, some parts of this motherhood journey still feel a bit tender.

As I stand at the edge of empty nesting (my last of five will be a senior next year), I find myself holding both gratitude and grief. I love my children deeply, and I am proud of so many things about who they are becoming. At the same time, there are still tensions, unanswered prayers, and moments when our relationships feel more complicated than I expected. There are dreams I’ve carried for them that have not unfolded the way I imagined. There are lessons I’d hoped would stick sooner. There are waves in this season where mothering my children feels less like an exuberant celebration and more like intentional surrender.

I think more of us feel this way than we talk about.

When You’ve Built Your Life Around Raising Your Children 

I built my life around being present for my children. As a homeschool mom, much of my life was shaped around creating an environment where they could grow, learn, and flourish. I rearranged priorities. I made sacrifices that affected my time, energy, opportunities, and finances because I believed being intentional with my children mattered.

Now, don’t get me wrong…

I’ve lived my life too. While prioritizing my kids, I’ve made sure to live, grow, and expand. But that doesn’t mean that my choices for how I did that weren’t greatly affected by my desire to be involved in the way my husband and I chose to be.

I do not regret choosing presence. I do not regret the years spent investing in my family. I still believe that mom’s investment and presence matter.

But I would also be dishonest if I said there have not been moments when I quietly wondered whether I did enough (or did too much). Did I handle certain seasons well? Should I have made different decisions? Many mothers carry questions like these, especially when the outcome feels unclear.

One of the hardest parts of motherhood is that there are no report cards at the end of the day. There is no neat formula that guarantees a particular result. You can love deeply, pray faithfully, teach consistently, and still watch your children make choices you would not have chosen for them. That reality can make motherhood feel hopeless if we are not careful about reframing our mindset.

Release the Weight of Being Responsible for Everything

One of the lessons I am learning in this season is that faithfulness and control are absolutely not the same thing. In fact, they are diabolically opposed at times.

As mothers, we carry so much responsibility for so long that it becomes easy to believe everything depends on us. We learn to anticipate needs, solve problems, manage schedules, teach lessons, and hold everything together. Over time, it can become difficult to separate what belongs to us from what belongs to God. I am slowly but surely coming to understand that I was never called to be my children’s savior.

I can create the environment. I can teach. I can model values. I can apologize when I get things wrong. I can pray. I can love them consistently and with intention. But I cannot control every outcome. That responsibility was never mine to carry.

There is freedom in remembering that God loves our children even more than we do and that He has loved them longer than we have because He knew them before we knew they existed. He sees what we cannot see. He knows the parts of their story that are still unfolding. He is able to work in places where our words, wisdom, and efforts cannot reach.

For the mother carrying guilt, despondency, or disappointment today, I want you to lean in right here. It is so important to ask yourself whether you are holding responsibility for things that only God has the authority and insight to control.

Trust God With the Parts You Cannot Yet See

We often hear the phrase, “You reap what you sow,” but what we don’t talk about enough is timing. Some seeds grow quickly. Others take much longer to break through the surface. Some growth happens internally before anything changes outwardly. Sometimes the fruit God is producing looks different than the picture we carried in our minds.

Motherhood requires a tremendous amount of faith because so much of the work happens underground. You spend years repeating the same lessons, praying the same prayers, and loving your children through different stages without always seeing immediate evidence that it’s making a difference. That can feel discouraging, especially when you compare your story to other families who appear to have everything figured out.

But visible fruit is not the only evidence that God is working. Sometimes God is using difficult seasons to shape both you and your children at the same time. Faithful sowing still matters, even when the harvest feels delayed.

Redefining Success in Motherhood

This season has taught me that success in motherhood cannot simply be defined by appearances.

It is not having perfect children.
It’s not having every relationship feel easy.
It’s not getting immediate confirmation that every sacrifice paid off.

Success actually looks like continuing to love well in complicated seasons.
Praying even when you are exhausted.
Showing up when things feel uncomfortable.
Remaining openhearted instead of bitter.
Trusting God enough to release what you cannot force.

This Mother’s Day, my life and the lives of my children may not look exactly the way I once imagined they would in this season, but I still believe God is present in this story. I still believe that nothing done in love and obedience is ever lost, even when the results are not immediately apparent.

So, if this day feels complicated for you, too, I hope you give yourself permission to hold both gratitude and grief honestly before God.

I hope you remember that He sees every seed you planted, every sacrifice you made, and every prayer you prayed, long after everyone else has forgotten.

Nothing surrendered to Him is wasted.

So, regardless of what you see, I’m blessing you with a “Happy Mother’s Day”.

Simply because you are a mom and you have done and/or are doing the best you can do today.

And that’s perfectly enough to be celebrated.


Reflection Questions: 

  1. What expectations have you been carrying in motherhood that you are realizing may need to be surrendered or redefined in this season?
  2. In what areas are you carrying responsibility for outcomes that ultimately belong to God?
  3. Where have you seen evidence of faithfulness in your motherhood, even if the “fruit” does not look the way you expected?
  4. What would it look like for you to extend yourself more grace as a mother right now instead of only focusing on what feels unfinished or unresolved?

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Chrystal is the Founder and CEO of The Sister Circle, an organization that exists to provide practical encouragement and equip women of faith to live with intention and purpose. Chrystal is also a best-selling author and speaker who reaches a wide audience, speaking at conferences, hosting her podcast, and leading the women’s ministry at her home church.