The Formation Happening in Ordinary Days

The Formation Happening in Ordinary Days

We tend to think of growth as something we can see. A milestone reached, a behavior changed, visible shift that tells us something is working. Truthfully, much of what shapes a child’s life happens long before anything is visible.

Deuteronomy 6:6–7 says,
“These words that I command you today shall be on your heart. You shall teach them diligently to your children… when you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way, and when you lie down, and when you rise.”

Formation is not built in isolated moments, it is built in repetition. In the middle of daily life, in ordinary rhythms, in conversations that feel small at the time. This kind of formation does not feel dramatic.

It feels like:

Answering the same question again.
Correcting tone.
Redirecting behavior.
Explaining why something matters.

And because it feels repetitive, it can sometimes feel ineffective, but repetition is not a sign that something is not working. It is often the way something begins to take root, children learn through consistency.

They learn what matters by what is repeated. They learn what is safe by what is predictable. They learn what is true by what is reinforced over time.

This means that the ordinary structure of your day is not separate from your child’s formation. It is the primary place where it happens. There is no single conversation that defines a child. There is a pattern and patterns are built slowly.

If your days feel repetitive, it does not mean they are unproductive. It means they are formative. One earnest MOMent at a time.

– Earnest Mom

A Gentle Invitation: Walking Through April Showers Together

A Gentle Invitation: Walking Through April Showers Together

There are seasons in motherhood that do not need fixing.

They need space.

Space to be noticed.
Space to be understood.
Space to be held without rushing past them.

April has a way of bringing those kinds of seasons into focus. The slower days. The quieter moments. The ones that do not immediately bloom into something visible.

We often move quickly through these spaces, looking ahead to what feels lighter or easier. But there is something meaningful about staying a little longer.

About noticing what is already happening.

Throughout this month, we have been talking about rain. Not as something to endure, but as something that prepares. Something that softens. Something that makes growth possible, even when that growth is not yet visible.

And the more I have sat with that idea, the more I have felt the need for something simple.

Not another plan.
Not something to complete.
Just a small space to reflect.

So beginning Saturday, April 11th, we will walk through a 7-Day devotional together on Substack (click here to join the chat and get the devotional). April Showers: A Gentle Guide for a Weary Season.

This is not meant to be heavy or time-consuming. Each day is short. A scripture, a few words, a quiet prompt.

Something to return to in the middle of real life.

We will also be gathering in subscriber chat each day. Not for answers. Not for pressure. Just for conversation.

A place to notice together.

What feels heavy.
What feels different.
What feels like it might be growing.

You do not need to do this perfectly.

You do not need to keep up in a strict way.

You are simply invited to come as you are, and walk through it with us.

Because sometimes the most meaningful shift is not what changes around us.

It is what we begin to see within it.

We are in this together,
one earnest MOMent at a time

When Life Feels Full but Your Soul Feels Thin

When Life Feels Full but Your Soul Feels Thin

There is a kind of tired that doesn’t come from doing too much. It comes from holding too much. Information. Responsibility. Emotional weight. Decisions that never quite feel finished.

For many mothers, this quiet exhaustion doesn’t look dramatic from the outside. The house is running. The children are cared for. The day moves forward. But internally, it can feel like there is no margin.

Proverbs 27:7 says, “The one who is full loathes honey, but to one who is hungry everything sweet is pleasant.”

There is a kind of fullness that is not nourishing. It is possible to be surrounded by information, input, and even good things, and still feel depleted. This is one of the quieter challenges of modern motherhood. We are not just carrying our homes, we are carrying constant awareness.

We know more.
We see more.
We are reachable at all times.

While much of it is not inherently harmful, the accumulation can leave very little room for stillness. When everything is full, it becomes difficult to recognize what is actually needed. This is where the idea of “April showers” begins to take on a different meaning.

Rain forces a slowing.

It interrupts normal rhythms.
It quiets activity.
It creates space, whether we planned for it or not.

Sometimes, that interruption is not a setback. It is an invitation. An invitation to notice what has been filling us. An invitation to release what is unnecessary. An invitation to return to a steadier pace.

The goal is not to eliminate everything. It is to become more aware of what we are carrying, and whether it is nourishing or simply occupying space. Because a full life is not always a full heart. And sometimes, what we need most is not more. It is less.

Remember, even in the rainy seasons, we are in this together, one earnest MOMent at a time.

– Earnest Mom