• “Pee Puddles & Pancakes: When God Meets You in the Mess”

    There I was, flipping pancakes like the domestic goddess I pretend to be before 9 a.m., when I heard it:

    “Mommy! I need to pee!”

    Now listen — my 3-year-old is not so good at potty training, and every time he “remembers” to tell me he has to go, it feels like we’re winning a prize. So I smile. I beam. I’m about to drop the spatula and give this kid a standing ovation.

    Until I round the corner.

    That’s when I see it:

    A glistening, shimmering puddle on the bathroom floor.

    He already went.

    And by “went,” I mean Niagara Falls.

    I didn’t even have time to process before I nearly slipped and fell in it, barefoot, holding a plate of half-cooked pancakes like some kind of frazzled breakfast ninja.

    And just like that, my morning turned into a soggy object lesson in sanctification.

    💧 Sanctification in the Splash Zone

    Let’s talk honestly: potty training is not for the faint of heart.

    It’s repetitive, messy, and full of false hope.

    So is sanctification.

    “But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience…”

    — Galatians 5:22

    Parenting toddlers is basically God’s favorite way to grow that fruit.

    Not by handing you a peaceful morning with dry floors and cooperative children, but by letting you nearly face-plant in pee while trying to make breakfast.

    In that moment, I didn’t feel holy. I felt sticky. And very aware of how much work God still has to do in me.

    🧽 Grace, Even on Bathroom Floors

    I cleaned it up. Again. I hugged him. Again. I told him, “Next time, let’s try to tell Mommy before we go,” which, of course, he nodded to with full toddler confidence.

    But as I stood there with a wet towel and a cold pancake, I was reminded:

    God’s grace meets me right in the mess.

    In the half-cleaned kitchen.

    In the bathroom splash zone.

    In the sigh I let out because I’m exhausted and out of syrup and patience.

    “My grace is sufficient for you, for My power is made perfect in weakness.”

    — 2 Corinthians 12:9

    🙌 Final Thought:

    Friend, if you’re potty training while flipping pancakes — or just trying to survive another day of motherhood with your socks and sanity intact — know this:

    You are not alone in the mess.

    God sees you. He’s growing you.

    Not despite the puddles, but right in the middle of them.

    Let the fruit of patience, love, and gentleness keep ripening in your home, even when it feels like nothing is going as planned.

    You’re not behind. You’re being sanctified — one soggy step at a time.

    🙏 A Short Prayer:

    Lord, thank You for meeting me in sticky kitchens, tired mornings, and toddler chaos. Grow patience in me where I have none, and remind me that You’re not waiting for me to clean it all up — You’re already here. Amen.

  • The First Giggle: A Sound Straight from Heaven

    There are many firsts that melt a parent’s heart — the first smile, the first time those tiny fingers curl around yours, the first night they finally sleep a few hours straight. But then, one day, it happens. Out of nowhere, your newborn lets out a giggle. Not just a smile, not just a coo — but a sound so pure and contagious it feels like heaven just cracked open for a second.

    Why Giggles Matter

    That first laugh does something to you. It’s a reminder that parenthood is not just diapers, exhaustion, and midnight feedings. It’s joy. It’s the sound of innocence, trust, and connection — your baby is telling you, “I feel safe enough to delight in you.”

    And let’s be honest — once babies figure out giggles, they become experts at using them to wrap us around their tiny fingers.

    How to Spark More Laughter

    Every baby is different, but here are a few ways parents can encourage those sweet giggles:

    Play peekaboo — the classic never fails. Use silly voices or noises — babies love exaggeration. Gentle tickles — tummy, toes, or under the chin. Make eye contact — laughter often starts in the eyes before the sound follows.

    And when they do laugh? Don’t rush it. Soak it in. Laugh with them. Those shared moments are the threads that stitch families tighter together.

    Faith in the Smallest Joys

    In a world heavy with worry, a baby’s giggle is God’s gentle reminder: joy still exists. Jesus Himself pointed to children as examples of faith and wonder (Matthew 18:3). That tiny laugh echoes eternity — a glimpse of the Kingdom where joy never ends.

    So next time your baby giggles, pause. Let it heal the tired places in your heart. That sound is more than cute — it’s holy.

    ✨ Your Turn: Do you remember the first time your baby giggled? What made them laugh? Share your memory in the comments — we can all use more joy!

  • When Motherhood Is Loud: The Peppa Pig Power Struggle

    By Lizzie @ What Makes My Kid Cry Today

    Real Life. Real Laughs. Real Jesus.

    It started like any normal moment in a house full of small humans with large emotions.

    My middle child decided to put on Peppa Pig.

    Not because he wanted to watch it—oh no, this was a strategic move.

    A calculated attempt to get a rise out of his younger brother.

    My 4th son , ever ready with an opinion, responds instantly:

    “Peppa Pig is stupid.”

    Sharp. Bold. No room for confusion.

    My middle child, without even blinking, asks:

    “Do you want to watch Peppa Pig?”

    And my 4th child, with the confidence of someone who absolutely did not just insult the show, says:

    “Yesssssss.”

    This is the moment in motherhood where you don’t even have the energy to correct the hypocrisy.

    You just stand there, baffled and mildly amused, wondering how cartoons became tools of psychological warfare.

    But it got me thinking…

    How many times have I done the exact same thing with God?

    I reject something before I really understand it. I claim I don’t need peace, rest, or grace—because I’m “fine.” I downplay what He’s offering me… until I realize I actually want it. Desperately.

    Just like 4th son with Peppa Pig, sometimes I push away what I truly need—out of pride, out of mood, or just because I can.

    And just like my middle son, God doesn’t force it—He just invites.

    “Do you want it?”

    “Do you want peace?”

    “Do you want rest?”

    “Do you want to trust Me instead of doing it all yourself?”

    God isn’t surprised by our contradictions.

    He doesn’t withdraw when we change our minds or stumble over our own stubbornness.

    He simply waits… and offers again.

    🙏 Faith Takeaway:

    We serve a God who knows our hearts better than we do.

    He sees past the “Peppa Pig is stupid” moments in our lives and lovingly invites us to come sit with Him anyway.

    Even when our mouths say no, and our hearts whisper yes.

    Scripture to Reflect On:

    “The Lord is compassionate and gracious, slow to anger, abounding in love.”

    — Psalm 103:8