• Wife
  • Mom
  • Me

Wife, Mom, & Me

~ Finding the sacred in the ordinary, one honest word at a time.

Wife, Mom, & Me

Tag Archives: Marriage

A Blank Page Full of Possibility

18 Wednesday Feb 2026

Posted by tiffanysanch in Me, Mom, Wife

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Buddhism, Children, Christian, Christianity, College, Divorce, Faith, Family, Home, Journey, Lies, life, Love, Marriage, Masks, Mirror, Past, Potential, Truth, writing

It had been two years since I stepped foot in my home, and now here I was, breaking and entering. According to our divorce settlement, I wasn’t supposed to be there until August 1st (two days later), but he was gone now, and I had a key. With the confidence of a criminal, and the excitement of a little girl, I walked up to the threshold, turned the knob, and opened that door to the rest of my life.

Bare walls were stained with dirt and varnish from where old photos used to hang. Empty holes decorated the walls and dust bunnies hugged edges of the floor. I pretended to not notice the items strategically left behind to trigger me, but I was comforted by the sounds I made as I walked across the old floor. All its little cracks and flaws were exactly as I remembered them.

California sun beamed through the skylights, hitting the chandelier that hung in the great room. Rainbows danced across the walls and onto my hand, reflecting its crystals. The room felt spacious and generous, yet barren, like a white sheet of paper, begging for me to reclaim her once again.

I walked through the kitchen and out into the garage. An ordinary space for most homes, but not mine. I waded through trash bags, old toys, and family memories, to get to a small space under the stairs that doubled as my sacred meditation space years prior. Unrecognizable now, as it was filled with paint and construction materials, but thankfully, that space was mine. A symbol of solitude. For many years it was my quiet corner of the house, where I found peace and reprieve from the things I could not change.

I made my way upstairs and walked straight past the master bedroom into my closet to find another space that I held dear. Just a small table where I suited up each morning to get ready and face the world. The lights had been torn down, but my mirror remained. Corporate America “me.” Engaged mother “me.” Happy wife “me.” I strive to show up for all three every day. Some days I get it right, but at least now, the mirror won’t lie back at me.

It’s funny, ten years ago I wrote about a mirror and said, “I’m determined to remain in the space where masks are no longer necessary because I have enough courage to be myself — because an imperfect truth is greater than any false perfection I could portray.” It was the last thing I wrote before I went silent. Maybe because I’d told a truth I wasn’t brave enough to live — or because I subconsciously knew what was coming. Maybe both.

My 18-year old daughter’s walk through the house was different from mine. Tilley reclaimed her space, but her connection to it carried a lot more pain. The not-so-hidden messages brought tears to her eyes.

It’s been six months since we moved in. We have celebrated a lot as I began a beautiful, new life with my husband, Clinton. A rehearsal dinner to host our family and friends, the memorable wedding that followed. Birthday parties, Thanksgiving, and Christmas went by faster than I have ever remembered.

But the sands of time are quickly slipping away and taking my sweet Tilley with them. Six months ago, we moved in, but only six more until she leaves for college. It feels like yesterday when she was just a little girl running around the house. I do my best to surrender to the smallest moments with her. Whether it’s curating a short video of us eating our favorite treats from the grocery store or sushi dinner with her, Clinton, and me, I collect memories like postcards from a trip I’m not ready to end.

Last week after school, she walked in the door and collapsed on me while I laid on the couch. Head on my chest. Asleep in minutes. I didn’t move for two hours; afraid that if I did, the moment would break — and she’d be eighteen again instead of four.

So much has changed since I wrote down my thoughts ten years ago. I have since put away the masks and let go of the people who couldn’t stand by me. More importantly, my kids found their wings. I gave them freedom and wheels — literally cars and bikes — and the opportunity to find their own voice. Even though their childhood home was gone, we rebuilt that foundation from something new. Tilley found faith in God and a church to call her own.

And although it’s my original, childhood faith, Tilley was not raised with Christianity. For most of her life, she experienced a mom who meditated on the living room floor, attended silent retreats, and sang words she didn’t understand in Tibetan temples. She burned incense, held her hands in mudras, and recited mantras while saving bugs from the busy sidewalk. But now in her teenage years, she attends Catholic school, participates in a life group, goes to church on Saturday & Sunday, and holds my hand before dinner to pray.

So much of my life was spent looking backward — the marriage, the masks, the woman who used to perform. But standing in this house with new paint on the walls and old cracks in the floors, I’ve learned that the past and the future live under the same roof. They’re neighbors sharing walls, making noise, learning to coexist. The old house didn’t disappear when we redecorated. And the little girl who used to fall asleep on my chest is still inside the woman who’s about to drive away.

I spent two years fighting to get my house back. I’ve painted the walls and reclaimed my rooms. I built a life with Clinton inside these halls. And now I watch time pull my daughter toward the door and realize the foundation was never the house. It was the courage to be real inside it. To remove the masks. To stop pretending. I see that same courage in Tilley now — finding her own voice, building her life exactly the way she wants it. And I think — I hope — she learned some of that from watching her mother be brave enough to start over.

I went silent for ten years. Not because I had nothing to say — but because I let other people’s versions of me be louder than my own. But this bare, imperfect, reclaimed house gave me back my blank page. And for the first time in a decade, I’m not afraid to write on it. Because an imperfect truth is still greater than any false perfection I could portray.

Tilley has seen both sides. The masks and what lives underneath them. The performance and the freedom that comes when it ends. She has held incense in one hand and a Bible in the other. She has lived inside the lie and watched her mother fight her way back to the truth. She is ready. She has been prepared — not by perfection, but by all of it. And like this house — barren, imperfect, and honest — she is a blank page full of possibility. When she walks out that door in August, she won’t be leaving home. She’ll be carrying it with her.

The Perfect Example of Love

16 Monday Feb 2015

Posted by tiffanysanch in Mom

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

2015, Adoption, Anger, Children, Compassion, Confidence, Defiance, Divine Love, Father, Fear, Flower, Grief, Heart, Heartbreak, Heritage, Loss, Love, Marriage, Mother, Parenthood, Parenting, Soul, Tantrums, Teacher, Unconditional love, Valentine's Day

images46 years ago this Valentine’s Day, a bright-eyed 22-year old man proposed to his 19-year old girlfriend. It had only been five months, but they were young and in love, and she happily said yes. Eight weeks later, they were married on a Tuesday at the local Methodist church. It was the beginning of a beautiful love affair, what would soon become the greatest love story I’ve ever known.

1521249_10152154321334602_1444298455_nI’ve witnessed this marriage between my parents for over 36 years, and to this day I’ve never seen them argue. It’s the perfect balance between two people; so similar in their approach to life, yet different in personality and demeanor. My father, a creature of habit and routine, enjoys his scheduled lifestyle of leisure, while my mother’s unpredictable and lively nature keeps you guessing. They were ideally suited for parenthood as the harmony between them infused their children’s lives.

FullSizeRenderA stream of confidence that never wavered, they provided a solid foundation of support during the emotional roller-coaster ride of my childhood. They were the calm beneath my teenage storm, a warm shelter and soft place to land. They always put their children’s needs before their own.

Now as a mother and parent of three strong-willed children, I think of their example as I react to the ups and downs of daily life. I feel their strength when I’m at my best and their forgiveness in my downfalls.  I remember their kindness before responding to a tantrum, and I still ask them for advice on a regular basis.

FullSizeRenderHere in the throes of motherhood, I have many opportunities to practice patience. Like most moms, I am constantly being challenged by my kid’s outbursts and behavior. I get easily frustrated with Evelyn’s shouts of defiance in her attempt to gain independence, and while I’m open and receiving of Mason’s wisdom and energy, I’m fearful, even angry, when he blindly follows his friends. Already a mother, yet still the student, I try to respond with kindness, but fall victim to my fear instead.

It has been widely quoted that “making the decision to have a child is to forever decide to have your heart go walking around outside your body.” I find it both exciting and terrifying to have such little control over these beings that carry my heart in their hand. For one day soon they’ll be making their own decisions and charter a new path. They’ll sail off into the world, taking my heart with them, but I’ll do my best to support their decisions, as my parents did for me.

IMG_5914A few weeks ago, Tilley and Mason brought home a heritage assignment, the most dreaded, yet cherished, school project for an adoptive mom. Although we talk about Mason’s heritage on a regular basis, this assignment facilitates a deeper discussion, providing a great opportunity to explore his feelings and any questions he may have. On the morning of his presentation, my heart leapt from my chest as he courageously presented to his classroom. He spoke proudly of his country, his heritage, and the details of his adoption.

As part of the assignment, we were asked to choose eight significant life events to outline the story of his life. Of course, I wanted to use his birth as the event that began his timeline, but we were asked to provide more specific details on what happened that day. Nervously, I dove into the discussion, wondering how he would respond.

On October 4th, 2007, in the capital city of Hanoi, Vietnam, Mason’s birth mother, doctor and nurses welcomed him into the world; a beautiful day when he and his mother spent precious hours together. This woman, who I may never have the privilege to meet, made my son’s life possible and for that I owe her a great debt. As he wrote down the details, he looked at me with his wise, insightful eyes and said, “I bet she misses me.” Those five words split my heart into a million pieces, evoking feelings of love and deep sorrow. I responded, “of course she does.”

On that day she made the decision to have her heart walk outside her body in the most selfless way; she offered her son another path, a different life than the one she could provide. The love she has for her son is the most unconditional love I know of; a divine, selfless love that pours everything out, yet expects nothing in return. Even if there is sorrow, only the purest love remains. Like finding the most beautiful flower, but not picking it because you want it to live.

Mason’s birth mom may never get to experience the joy that I feel when his smile lights up a room and she may never bear witness to his compassionate heart. Although their lives took separate paths, the connection between their souls will never be lost. Instead, they are on a journey to find each other within, to achieve inner peace and solitude, even amidst the physical loss.

I’ve been told that a broken heart physically hurts because light is breaking in allowing the heart to expand. In these broken moments we can either repress the pain by closing off our heart in fear, or we can give ourselves some time to grieve, the catalyst to healing and growth.

IMG_2220Behind every one of my children’s tantrums is an opportunity for my heart to expand or contract. When I was a child I acted out, but my parents showed me compassion. That love is part of me; the living and breathing example that shows me which way to go. But when my defiant children stand before me and anger is all I can taste, I can think of a woman in Vietnam, whose heart is standing before me. I can sit with my fear, feel my heart-break, and experience a level of love like I have never known before; pure, unconditional love with no expectation or attachment to the outcome. I can just let go, and when I do, I will find her there.

Follow Wife, Mom, & Me on WordPress.com

Top Posts & Pages

  • A Blank Page Full of Possibility
  • Take Me To Neverland
  • 3 Things I'd Teach My Younger Self

Categories

  • Wife
  • Mom
  • Me

Archives

  • February 2026 (1)
  • August 2015 (1)
  • March 2015 (1)
  • February 2015 (1)
  • January 2015 (1)
  • October 2014 (1)
  • August 2014 (1)
  • June 2014 (1)
  • April 2014 (1)
  • March 2014 (2)
  • February 2014 (3)
  • January 2014 (1)
  • August 2012 (1)
  • August 2011 (1)
  • February 2010 (2)

Tags

2014 2015 Adoption Anxiety Blogging Challenges Children Death Fear Insecurities Journey Joy Love Mother Motherhood New Year Past Potential Purpose Truth

Other Links

Blog Stats

  • 11,066 hits

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Wife, Mom, & Me
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Wife, Mom, & Me
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...