A Gift for Mom! 🤍

I’m about to turn 40, and it isn’t as traumatic as I always envisioned it to be. Aside from disturbed sleep (which I experienced in other decades of life, but for very different reasons), it is proving to be quite the peaceful transition.

This has led me to reflect on the last four decades of my life.

I spent my teen years trying to be just like everyone else, trying to fit in and be accepted. Whether it was family, friends, or boys, I liked whatever everyone else liked in order to be liked. This forced me to learn what I didn’t like the hard way, to narrow down what I did.

I spent my 20s trying to stand out. No longer just wanting to be accepted, I wanted to be wanted. Whether it was friends, employers, or a potential spouse, I wanted to be noticed for what I was good at. I focused so much on the big things that I missed appreciating almost all of the little things.

I spent my 30s trying to survive. Usually covered in spit-up, wearing a baby while chasing a toddler and rushing from one thing to the next, I just wanted to crawl into bed and make it through another day. Whether for my kids, my husband, the house, or a job, I wanted to do it all and have it all. This forced me to spread myself too thin and end up with quantity instead of quality—time, relationships, results, etc.

I’m a big believer in not wishing to change the past. What I’ve been through has made me who I am today. I genuinely believe failure is, hands down, a better teacher than success. So, if given the opportunity, I wouldn’t go back to tell my younger self not to do this or that specific thing or warn against an upcoming heartbreak or misstep.

But I wasn’t always this way. I spent over half those 40 years wanting to skip the hard parts. I would wish and pray and naïvely believe that there was a stage of life that would be filled with ease and leisure, and eventually, I would find it.

While I don’t see myself lying on a beach without a care in the world anytime in the next decade, I do have a sense of peace I will hold onto in my 40s because of all I worked through in my earlier decades. I plan to focus on lessons learned, hard times redeemed, and helping those who could potentially learn from it all.

My younger self would never believe where I am today, but that’s because she had no idea what she would have to go through to get to me.

I know who I am because of my teen years. I know what I deserve because of my 20s. And I know what truly matters because of my 30s.

And while I wouldn’t change a thing about those years, I also wouldn’t want to do it again.

Cheers to learning the hard way in order to find the peaceful way.
Cheers to hopefully more undisturbed sleep.
Cheers to 40.

So God Made a Grandmother book by Leslie Means

If you liked this, you'll love our book, SO GOD MADE A GRANDMA

Order Now!

Jess Gilardi

Jess Gilardi was a mental health therapist in the school system before becoming the full-time chaos coordinator for her family (aka stay-at-home mom). She and her husband have three growing kids. Jess started writing in hopes that by sharing her stories and lessons learned, she can help others learn “the easy way."

13 Nuggets of Wisdom From Middle Age

In: Living
middle aged woman smiling on couch

Dear younger me, Good news is you’re still going to be kicking it at 49, which should shock you considering you think people my age fall into the old category. Sorry to say, but you are clueless and naïve about the aging process, despite your beautiful innocence. Being “old” is relative—however, I do encourage you to enjoy your brief ability to fight gravity while you can. A downward trend awaits you. By the time you reach middle age, life will have done her job to enlighten your spirit, warm your heart, and humble more than your firm edge lines. Just remember...

Keep Reading

Dear Husband As You Turn 40

In: Journal, Relationships
Dear Husband As You Turn 40 www.herviewfromhome.com

Hi Babe, Happy Birthday! Are you feeling old? I know you are because you keep telling me so. And, on the off chance either of us forgets you are aging, your new, every-morning-aches-and-pains are always there to remind you of such, and Lord knows you are always there to complain about them to me. So no, I’ll never forget you’re getting older because you won’t let me. And speaking of not remembering, we should be glad you aren’t doing any of that just yet. Nope, you are still pretty “with it” and because of that, I’m pretty much still head over...

Keep Reading

Freedom at 40

In: Living
Woman holding balloons, color photo

I used to think 40 was so old. This thought wasn’t just limited to when I was a kid either—I thought so in my 20s and 30s too. But as I neared 40, my thought process shifted. I realized I had spent so much time in my 20s and 30s always striving to be better, always tired, often frustrated, disappointed, and annoyed. My 20s and 30s were spent having babies, raising littles to pre-teens, struggling to make ends meet financially and emotionally, trying to find time to be a wife and not just a mom. My 20s and 30s were...

Keep Reading