I don’t know where I am going yet, but I know that this is the beginning. The beginning of finding true velocity: a unity of moments, a lithe tempo, a right algorithm of speed and grace.
I am still rather far from it now, in the final semester of school, with my new job already nearly full time. And I’ll be the first to admit: The days don’t always offer the time I need for pondering, for the daily practice of writing, for rest. Until I’m done with graduate school, I know the hours will ignite, one after the next at a certain pre-determined heat, each one double booked, precious, full to saturation. And I’m humbled by the process. By being here again, at the outset again, new to the particular set of challenges and opportunities my life offers and asks. I spend my day tripping, sprinting, catching my balance, careening, laughing with sheer delight.
There are wins and losses: I drive Bean to school every morning; we have a part-time nanny who helps with the laundry; Sprout is finally making headway with potty training; T cooks weekday meals with the grace and kindness of saint. And I’m still trying to find an hour that offers itself for writing; time for running is inconsistent; I have a birthday party for Bean to plan, and no time to make it to the store for favors; I see my husband less than I’d like. And in the midst of it all I’ve realized I’ve somehow reached the life velocity that causes people say, “I don’t know how you do it” to me now.
I find myself shrugging at that remark. I don’t know how anyone does it. We’ve all got our own particular mess of moments and necessities; priorities and stumbling blocks. Each life is remarkable.
But beyond that, I shrug because I’m particularly resentful of cultural paradigm from which that statement springs.
I’m sure most of you are familiar with the book that spawned that phrase. Both it, and its movie counterpart have been suggested to me by no less than six women friends as a seminal narrative that “tells the story like it is.” I’ve been given two copies of it in fact, one from my mother. And I ended up watching the movie on the way back from California in the plane, but regretted my choice upon landing, as manufactured guilt clung like burrs to the back of my mind as I greeted my boys; drove home with my husband; and then helped my kids put on their pajamas and brush their teeth and go to bed.
Guilt.
I don’t think it is a terrible book by any means. It gets many of the details right, of a full-velocity life. The pace, the tumult, the jam-packed days. What I resent is the paradigm it perpetuates. It’s that Kate’s primary emotion and modus operandi is guilt: About her work, about her husband, and her kids.
It gives fule to myth: That you should feel guilty as a woman if you work away from home; and that the smug comments of stay at home mothers are both assumed and justified. I call bullshit.
Women who work at home, and who work away from their home, and who stay at home each have the choice to frame their lives in terms of guilt or fulfillment.
Whatever you slice it, you see a different slice. There are challenges and advantages to each way of being in the world, and to tell the story of a woman who works and has children as a guilt riddled narrative does a huge disservice to all women, regardless of their childrearing status.
So as I’m writing now, about the early phases of doing this full velocity thing called life that includes work and kids and a thesis and whatever other bits fall into the mix, my hope is that I can begin telling the story in a slightly different way.
Less guilt, more fulfillment. Less culturally perceived “shoulds,” more personally perceived moments of sheer awesome.
I am at the beginning of a new phase; an epic; an adventure. It feels off kilter some days. There are days that I don’t have enough time for anything more than the barest essentials. Still, unless I read about it somewhere, guilt doesn’t factor in to the equation.
My life is asking for new definitions and capabilities. It demands that I cultivate the ability to adapt to the speed of things moving in multiple dimensions and directions simultaneously. It pushes me to imagine bigger constructs; and to see time, and speed, and distance, and success as new non-linear relatives.
My life is being altered by the nature of the work I am doing; by my expectations for myself; by the sunlight gradually softening towards spring; by my sons turning three and seven; by a dozen years with the man I love; by my thesis; and by all that is unfinished at present. And instead of guilt, what I am striving for is to acquire a certain degree of nonattachment. To do my very best, to pour my soul into the work I do, to love my boys when I am with them, to trust that when I’m not that they are flourishing, and to let go and know: Our right lives are happening now, in dynamic unison, every morning, every afternoon, every night.
Tagged: Full Velocity Living, Productivity, Raising Boys

What a wonderful post, and the comments extend the conversation in ways that make it even better. My first thought as I read this was when I hear people say this, it feels like it’s out of some kind of dissatisfaction they are feeling with what they are doing, some desire for change, for things to be different in their own lives. Or maybe I should say we do this, because when I think of that thought welling up, that is the place it comes from.
Which takes me to the second thought about this… that life is messy and hard and knowing we’re doing the right thing takes faith and trust. It’s much easier to look to another woman and say “I don’t know how she does it”, then to choose what matters most to us, for our lives, again and again, and trust the risk of that.
This is incredible, Christina. I admit, I’m one of the ones to think “I don’t know how you do it,” but the sentiment comes from sincere admiration and the sense that our individual superpowers are born from our individual circumstances. I love these posts where you share so honestly and earnestly about your life. They’re inspiring as hell and ignite ideas in my own mind. “Dynamic unison” instead of Mommy guilt? Yes, a thousand times yes.
My cousin is a new doctor and a new mom and she is struggling with guilt too. The kind that says, “YOU are supposed to know how to do this. YOU are supposed to have all the answers.” What a burden. All we know as mothers is that we do the best we can with no instruction manual at all. And sometimes it is hard! She says, “Why doesn’t anyone tell you that it will be so HARD?” I guess my only answer is, “No one believes it until they’re there.” I think she would like to have the instant-love-that-bonds-you-to-your-baby myth split apart.
How this post resonated! People have been saying that to me for years! The only way I’ve found to shut them up is to answer, “It’s easy…I ignore my husband and children.” We just do it, that’s all. We ALL do it.
I recently left a full time, career inspired, job that I loved (most of the time anyway) to raise my wee one. I don’t feel guilty in the slightest, and I cringe to think that woman do. I am amazed that we’re the last “advanced” country not to offer at least a year of maternity leave to all mothers–so that when our children most need their mothers, the choice isn’t one we mothers have to make rather our country recongizes we are needed close to home. I think the comments on this post are so lovely and that the “stay at home mom vs working mom” thing has got to stop–we’re all working hard, whether we get recognition in the “work” world or not–being a full time Mom is incredibly hard work and being a working Mom is also incredibly hard. But that’s what we’re here for right? To find our limits then push past them? To grab the joy in every moment lest it be the last moment we’re allotted? I am reminded daily to spend less time “thinking about it” and more time “doing it” whatever “it” is… and I find that my life’s hardest work. Having a child has magnified the process of being present. I do know how we do it. One foot in front of the other–some days dancing, some days staggering, every day a blessing.
I have never commented before, but this post was just so wonderful. I am a graduate student who also works and my husband is a doctor and we have two young children. I won’t say I don’t ever feel guiltly, but in general I try to focus on the positive influences we have on our kids. There is a lot of love: for each other and for our chosen paths. I think the key for me is to not view my role as mother and my role of student/worker as separate. They are inter-related and (most of the time) enhance each other in ways I could never have imagined.
Your creative energy and your excitement let you know that you are on the right path.
Guilt is a purely destructive energy. If feelings of guilt come to mind, replace them immediately with total acceptance and total love for yourself.
And when we accept ourselves completely, the words and opinions of others have no affect on us.
incredibly, beautifully said as usual. and needed. may I say that with your new business, your writing has shifted – in your blog posts – to a slightly more chaotic, stream of consciousness writing. I quite like it. I (and this may just be me) love your sculpted, thought out eloquent writing, but this new slight shift makes me feel i’ve actually seen you, beyond the perfect phrasing. your message is always fresh and always eloquent, either way. congratulations on living without guilt. I aspire :)
Ayla & Meg, I’m so glad this came at the right time for you… Meg I love that you said this post “flips it all on its side.” I’m so aware of the myths we tell ourselves and each other…. and the power they hold for us.
There is a chapter in my book where I dig into myths like this as well… with the intention of breaking them open, and letting their power scatter.
Cara & Sonrie, you both touch on something else that is so fundamental to this story: choosing to be where we are. Being clear with expectations. Speaking up. Claiming what you need… you are both so wise.
Thank you for your thoughtful comments… I so love reading them.
Wow. Just wow. I really needed this post. Guilt is my main way of being. Always. There is always something that I haven’t done or that I did wrong because I was rushing. This post flips it all on its side. Thank YOU. xoxo
As soon as I was pregnant it became clear to me that,as a successful professional woman in my 30s, no matter what choice I made someone would be critical of it. Trial and error taught us that the best combination for our family was for me to stay home and my husband to work full time. I am routinely asked if I regret it or what I’m going to do about my career. No one has ever asked my husband if he regrets working. I also feel no guilt about expecting my working husband to take care of dinner, a load of laundry or bath time. His job isn’t 24 hours a day and mine shouldn’t be either. Fortunately, my husband has the same expectations.
Though I don’t yet have children, this is something I think about. Many of my friends have already struggled with this choice – whether to stay home, work part time, or work full time. Sometimes the decision is as clear cut as the need for income. Sometimes is it hazy with income, time at home, and other factors all entering the debate. The only constant is that whatever choice is made, the mother has to be content with her decision because others will always ask ‘how she does it,’ whether she spends 50 hours a week away from home or her entire week with her children.
This is coming at such a good time for me. I have three teenagers and a husband and am going to university fulltime and some days (most days lately) I feel like everything is slipping. Not enough time and energy to give anywhere. Always rushing from half done here to half done there. Resentful instead of inspired. So I am going to work on dumping the guilt and filling the moments with “sheer awesome” as you say. Trusting that we are all right where we are supposed to be , in lives that will grow and flourish. Thanks, Christina.