On this Mother's Day, when news is abuzz with reactions to how the Supreme Court may overturn Roe vs. Wade, I look at my children and wonder why anyone would reject the gift of life.
Every life is so precious - from conception to natural death - and so many people are ready and willing to welcome babies that other families cannot care for.
Every day, I am grateful to be "tied down" as Edgar Allen Guest so poetically write about in his poem "Tied Down".
Every life is so precious - from conception to natural death - and so many people are ready and willing to welcome babies that other families cannot care for.
What particularly irks me are those that look at children as a burden.
Yes, children can be challenging, but they are also such an incredible blessing. Every day, I am grateful to be "tied down" as Edgar Allen Guest so poetically wrote about in his poem "Tied Down".|
I think the poem is definitely worth sharing:
'They tie you down,' a woman said,
Whose cheeks should have been flaming red
With shame to speak of children so.
'When babies come you cannot go
The things you like you cannot do,
For babies make a slave of you.'
I looked at her and said: ''Tis true
That children make a slave of you,
And tie you down with many a knot,
That little babies have you tied?
Do you not miss the greater joys
That come with little girls and boys?
To hours of smiles and hours of care,
To nights of watching and to fears;
Sometimes they tie you down to tears
And make your trouble all worth while.
They tie you fast to chubby feet,
'They fasten you with cords of love
They tie you, whereso'er you roam,
They tug at you to bring you back.
Are those the babies have tied down.
'Oh, go your selfish way and free,
But hampered I would rather be,
Yes rather than a kingly crown
I would be, what you term, tied down;
Tied down to dancing eyes and charms,
Held fast by chubby, dimpled arms,