Music and Motherhood

Music has always been my quiet translator. It reaches places language cannot, steadies my nervous system, lifts me when I am low, and on the hardest days reminds me that there is meaning, rhythm, and a reason to keep going. Music has been the thing that told me, gently but firmly, that I was going to be okay.

Motherhood, especially in the early years, has a way of setting aside many of the things that once felt essential. Not lost, just postponed. Placed on a high shelf for “later,” whenever later decides to arrive.

These days, most of my soundtrack is kid approved. In the car, while making dinner, packing lunches, wiping counters, anything to keep the peace and prevent a full meltdown. Children’s music fills the house because silence feels risky and screaming feels worse. This is not a complaint. It is survival.

And honestly, I have embraced it. I have excellent kid playlists. One of my favorites is reggae versions of children’s songs, yes including The Wheels on the Bus, which somehow keeps all of us moving. We dance. We wiggle. We sing. We even have a karaoke machine with three microphones, one for each boy and one for mama.

But lately, I have been testing the edges.

I have been reclaiming pieces of myself in small, almost invisible ways. An inch here. A moment there. This morning, on the hour long drive to my mother’s house and back, instead of zoning out or surrendering to exhaustion, I played my own music. Not kid music. Not compromise music. Mine.

And my boys were fine.

As the miles passed, something familiar stirred. That old feeling of joy and possibility came rushing back, like a part of me waking up after a long sleep. I felt connected to the version of myself that existed before children, and also to the woman I am now. Tired. Overworked. Doing the invisible labor of a household that never truly rests.

That feeling is not new to me. It lives in The Pace of Nature as well. Lilly feels it too, that deep pull toward music as refuge, as truth teller, as the place where she can breathe without explaining herself. Music is where she remembers who she is when the world asks her to be smaller, quieter, more manageable. In that way, Lilly and I are not so different. We both know what it means to lose ourselves to responsibility and expectation, and how music becomes the thread that leads us back.

It made me wonder why I ever stopped listening to the things that light me up from the inside. The songs that loosen something in my chest, that shake the dust off my spirit, that remind me I am more than a mother, a chauffeur, a cook, a cleaner.

Motherhood asks a lot. Sometimes it asks for everything. But maybe it does not have to ask for this too.

Maybe letting my music back in, even just on a drive, even just for an hour, is not selfish. Maybe it is essential. Maybe it is how I stay aligned with my own pace of nature, how I remember myself, and how my boys get to know me not only as their mother, but as a whole person who still listens to what moves her.

And honestly, that feels like a rhythm worth keeping.

Writing, Motherhood, and The Pace of Nature

Being a writer with two young children is intense. Before having kids, writing was my life. I wrote to get published, to craft and polish The Pace of Nature, and to make it the best story it could be, which I now believe it is. Taking two years off from writing, although painful at the time, was probably the best thing I could have done for this story. Returning to it with fresh eyes, after becoming a mother of two, gave me perspective I didn’t have before. This story, based on true experiences, has always been incredibly close to my heart. Coming back to it as a different person, with a whole new lens shaped by motherhood, made it stronger than I ever could have imagined.

Before having children, writing was my main priority. My first son changed everything. I loved becoming a mom and had waited my whole life to hold him in my arms, yet I felt defeated for not having the time to continue building my writing career. Writing had always been my first baby. The Pace of Nature felt like a child I had created and nurtured, and stepping away from it felt impossible at first. But the distance allowed me to return with clarity, to strengthen the story, deepen the characters, and shape it into the novel I am proud of today.

Finishing the novel this past July through October was amazing but completely exhausting. As a mom of two young boys, I had read about moms waking up at 5:00 am to write their books and wondered how that was even possible. Experiencing this firsthand, writing from 5:00 to 6:30 a.m. and grabbing twenty minutes whenever I c ould, I quickly realized how hard it is to balance the chaos of motherhood with the focused demands of creating a story.Getting two young boys ready in the morning is a full-time job: getting them dressed, fed, shoes on, cleaning up after breakfast, handling laundry, making lunch, cooking, and cleaning again. Writing consumes your imagination, and during those months, I often found myself not fully present with my children. A new line or scene would pop into my head, and my attention would drift away from them. I didn’t like that.

This experience taught me something important: I want to be fully there for my boys. Those months of writing were incredible, and I believe The Pace of Nature was created with magic. But I am happy to be done with the intense creation phase. My boys are so young, and they are growing so fast. I don’t want to miss a beat. That said, The Pace of Nature is finished. I am submitting to agents and publishing houses while my four-year-old is at school and my two-year-old takes his daily three-hour nap. But I am no longer waking up at the crack of dawn to create or to market. I am exhausted and want to have energy to keep up with my two wild boys.

For now, I’m grateful for the quiet gift of three days a week – time to submit, to write, to share pieces of the work, and to search for the right marketing partner who can help carry The Pace of Nature into the world when the moment arrives.

If the novel does not find a home in traditional publishing by Fall 2026, I plan to self-publish no later than January 2027, trusting the story to meet its readers in its own way.

Thank you, as always, for your steady support. Sending much love to you all in the new year.