It’s an important reminder to note how fast time goes. But not always necessarily in the sad “They’re growing up too quickly, how is this happening?” way… it’s also important to remind ourselves that things change quickly when raising young children.

The chaos doesn’t stay the same.

The exhaustion fluctuates.

The frustrating phases pass.

The things you have time for changes.

The difficult things differ.

The joy remains and grows and the challenges come and go in varying degrees.

As quickly as summer came and as quickly as it’s winding down, I’m reminded that hard seasons pass. I find that the timing of summer ending closely aligns with the feeling of things settling a bit in my life. My youngest is almost 11 months and we’ve, dare I say, gotten into some sort of family of five rhythm that is working pretty well for us.

There are still PLENTY of challenges, of course, but I feel we are out of the initial newborn/figuring out how to manage three children haze (for the most part) and right now things feel strong and happy and fun.

I wouldn’t necessarily say ‘balanced,’ but I think I have come to terms with the fact that my life won’t feel balanced for a long, long time. And I actually do think I am okay with that.

My confidence levels have risen and I feel I am able to manage the kids out on adventures better. We just got back from a road trip to NY (just me and my three girls) to visit family and friends and it went really, really well.

A few months ago, I tried this exact same trip and it went really, really poorly. I was at my peak overwhelm at that point and I’m not sure what I was thinking at the time.

Why, exactly, did I think driving about five hours in a car with a 5-month-old, 2-year-old , and a 4-year-old (without another adult) during the week when I had work deadlines to meet would be a sound idea?

I think I just thought, Hey I used to do this when I had two kidsā€¦ I can manage it.

But I couldn’t. And I definitely learned a lesson that I continue to learn and try to reconcile with: Don’t bite off more than you can chewā€”especially in seasons of transition.

Things are FAR from “easy” right now, but they’re good. They’re feeling real and regular and more manageable. The weight has been lifted off my shoulders a bit, and the wheels continue to turn.

think we have found our new normal.

And you know what I am realizing at this moment? This is about our hundredth “new normal” as a family.

Since finding out I was pregnant over five years ago, and holding my first baby in my arms four and a half years ago, then swiftly adding two more babies into the mixā€”we have shifted priorities, changed our mindsets, refocused.

We’ve lost it, broken it, and pieced it back together. We’ve grown, we’ve evolved, we’ve bettered ourselves.

And we will do it all a hundred more times over the next five years.

The seasons changeā€”we changeā€”and that is part of the beauty of being alive. The warm spring sunshine and bright, colorful flowers wouldn’t be as fulfilling without the cold, bitter winter, now would they? (Or is that just because I live in New England?)

In motherhood, the small moments of extreme heart-bursting love experienced between us and our babies, like when my 2-year-old looks up at meā€”out of nowhereā€”to tell me I have pretty eyes, or when I watch my 4-year-old teach my 11-month-old how to bark like a dog, or when my daughters run to the door the second they hear their dad’s keys jiggle in the lockā€¦ they all wouldn’t be as satisfying without the lessons after the meltdowns, the chats after the arguments, the tears during the growing pains.

If you’re in a tough season right now, please let this be my reminder to you: You will catch a break. You will figure it out. You will find a way.

Time is moving.

The tantrums will tame.

The sass will settle.

The sleep will come.

The crying will calm.

You will continue to rock this.

You’re not failing, mama.

It will not be like this forever. ā¤ļø

What kind of season are you in right now?