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Amy K Fewell | Homesteading for the Kingdom

Amy K Fewell | Homesteading for the Kingdom

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Dear Mom of “Just One Child”

March 11, 2015 · In: family, motherhood, personal journey, womanhood

Dear Mom of “Just One Child”,

Let me first start by apologizing for the people who’ve said that to you….for the people who have said, “but you only have one child”. How insulting.

Standing in the grocery store the other day, I could see it on your face. Your little boy was grumpy and moody, and certainly wasn’t being “kind” with his mini-tantrum. He crossed his arms and made a pout face, and I chuckled, because I have “one of those kids” too. And as you rolled your eyes and began to walk, the mother walking past you with five children chuckled too. But instead of just smiling and saying, “cheer up”, she decided to innocently say, “goodness, imagine having 5 of those!”

You forced a small smile and a “yeah…really…”, but as you looked at him your heart felt happiness and sadness all at once. Your face was crinkled with annoyance and you probably prayed a quick prayer, hoping this shopping trip would be short and sweet the rest of the time. How embarrassing for you.

Our eyes met, I smiled and said, “it’s ok, I have one of those too, only one, and honestly, it doesn’t matter whether you have 1 or 10, it’s never the same….but it will get better.” And your body language completely changed. You relaxed and said, “thank you, you have no idea how much I needed that”, and grabbing your little ones hand, you smiled and went about your way, and I mine.

It’s mostly harmless when people say it — you must realize that. But most don’t realize the frustration it can cause a mom of “just one child”.

The reality is that whether you have one child, or 20 children, it’s never the same.

Women with multiple children have most likely never had a single child at an older age unless they began having more children later in life. Therefore, they absolutely cannot sympathize with you on the daily challenges you have with “just one child”. At the same time, you cannot sympathize with them on the daily challenges they have with multiple children. But it’s still “different”. Your challenges will not be the same as theirs, and their challenges will not be the same as yours.

We don’t go around saying, “wow, imagine only having one of those….” how insulting would that be to a mother with multiple children?

We’re all mothers, and just because we have one child or multiple children, it doesn’t make us better or more able than any other mother. Your parenting skills do, not the number of children you have. Your life isn’t any harder or easier because of the number of children you have, because your life adapts.

Whenever the statement is said, “imagine having two….” or three or five or fifteen….I always have to bite my tongue. Actually, I have “imagined” having more than one child for the past 5 years, but the sad reality is, I don’t have them here with me. Whether from infertility or miscarriage, it just hasn’t happened yet, and therefore, it remains “in my imagination”. But people don’t realize…..

Or what if you’re a mother of one child and that’s just all that you want? Maybe your job doesn’t allow you to spend time with your children like you’d want to. Maybe you’re a single mom. Or maybe your marriage isn’t in a place where you want to have more children right now. Or maybe one was enough for you, because you’ve realized you really just can’t handle another one. Good for you, there is absolutely no failure in that, don’t beat yourself up about it. Because it takes greater courage to not have children than it does to have children you cannot adequately and emotionally tend to properly.

Momma, I get it. And maybe it doesn’t annoy me all of the time, because I understand the true intention. But sometimes, I just wish people would think before they speak as if they “know more” than we do….

Which brings me to my next letter….

Dear “Imagine Having More Than One of Them” Mom,

Please stop. Because the truth is, when a mom of one child is venting or struggling, the struggle is real. And no, you absolutely cannot sympathize because you have “more kids than her”. Her struggles are much different than yours, and your struggles are very real as well!

We are one child’s entertainment all day long. Sounds fun, right? No. There are no play mates, we are the play mate. There is no one to fight with other than “mom”. And quite honestly, they get tired of seeing mom all of the time. But guess what, we love this child with ever fiber in our being.

Many of us still work for a living, and some of us from home….guess what, that means we have to work, make money, make phone calls, be glued to a computer half the day, some of us homeschool, AND take care of a child. Oh, and we have a house to tend to. And when we can’t pay attention to them, and they don’t have a playmate (even if they fight), we feel guilty….really, really guilty….

Some of us work all day outside of the home, which means less time with our child, which means our child becomes independent and clingy all at once. Or maybe they just become rebellious or even introverted. And then they want our attention at home, but sadly, we still have a house to clean and real life is waiting for us.

Some of us have it easy, we really do. While others have a completely different situation….with “just one child”.

Some of us who can’t have more children think about it, often. We think about how our child may never have a sibling to laugh with, and even to fight with. We think about how our child will never have a brother or sister to stand beside at a wedding, or how his future children may never have an aunt or uncle on his side of the family. We think about how our child will most likely have his childhood days cut short, because he’ll be more independent than most, and will be more mature at an older age than most boys his age. The list goes on…..

Maybe next time instead of saying “imagine having xx of them” say something like, “it’s ok, all kids are like that, it will get better”.

Wow!! How much more encouraging that would be for a mother to hear rather than the condemnation that she shouldn’t feel annoyed with her child because she “just has one”.

Dear Moms….

Most of all, don’t forget that we’re in this together. No matter how many children we have or don’t have, we are the only ones who can sympathize with each other. We are the only ones who “get” one another. Build a community of like minded people, not just like minded family sizes. Encourage fellow moms, and choose your words wisely. There literally is a heartbreak behind every door, and while you may say something that you think is harmless, sometimes, it’s not. It’s not your fault, at all, but there are ways around it.

Dear Moms….

Most of all, try to be understanding.

Be compassionate.

Be kind.

Be merciful.

Show grace.

Don’t compare.

Be encouraging.

Love.

And stop trying to hide flaws. We all have them, we all know it. We’re wasting our time when we act like we don’t. Share them. Embrace them. And teach others how to do the same.

We’re all in this together….and our kids are too….

By: Amy K. Fewell · In: family, motherhood, personal journey, womanhood · Tagged: motherhood, only child

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I'm Amy. I love organic food but I love cookies too I love Jesus and His grace. I believe broken people make the biggest impact in the world when they share their stories. I believe in stories, and I'm sharing mine.

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@amy.fewell

Alright friends, here’s your Weekly Ag Brief — the Alright friends, here’s your Weekly Ag Brief — the week in food, farming, and freedom. 🌾

🪰 SCREWWORM: A flesh-eating fly is spreading through Texas livestock — 30+ animals now, including sheep and goats. Easy to spot and treat if you’re paying attention. Check your animals, especially newborn navels.

🥬 PARASITE IN THE LETTUCE: Cyclospora has sickened 840+ people across 31 states — a parasite whose only known host is human beings. Officials suspect store-bought leafy greens. Which makes you wonder about all that “biosolids” (a tidy word for treated human sewage) D.C. spent years pushing farmers to spread on their fields. You know what never has this problem? The lettuce in a pot on your porch.

💵 DISASTER $: USDA quietly improved its farm disaster programs — predator losses now paid at 100%, unborn livestock covered back to 2024, some of it automatic. (I don’t take government money — but if you would, it’s there.)

🔬 TESTING: For the first time, USDA/HHS/EPA will test processed foods for heavy metals. Good — now do glyphosate.

🏛️ FARM BILL: The Senate’s back, aiming to mark up “Farm Bill 2.0.” This is the big one. Watch it religiously.

🇺🇸 KNOW YOUR FARMER: Ten more companies adopted the “Product of USA” label, and Farm to School hit a record $20M for local food in schools.

🫐 RECALL: Frozen organic blueberries at Publix (8 states) tied to an E. coli outbreak — check for lot 60401.

The thread through all of it? The closer your food is to your own hands, the safer it is.

Full breakdown on my Substack — comment BRIEF to have it sent to your inbox
There is another heat advisory today, but this mor There is another heat advisory today, but this morning there was the coolest slight breeze on my back as I milked. Autumn is around the corner. In fact, it is already making its way here. The animals know it, the land knows it, nature itself knows it. Why? Because it’s inevitable. 

There are things in life that are simply laws of nature. The sun always rises in the morning and sets in the evening. The moon always has the same cycles. Many parts of the world have four seasons. Rain makes grass and crops grow. Bugs break down organic matter into soil. What goes up must come down. And so on.

There are laws of the Kingdom of God too. My oldest son and I were talking about this the other day. It’s the scriptures that say “if…then”. It’s “if you love Me, you’ll keep my commandments and obey My teachings”. It’s “honor your father and mother so that you may live well in the promised land”. It’s “observe the sabbath, come to Me you who are weary and heavy burdened, and I will give you rest.” It is “if you truly love Me, the Father will love you, and I will manifest Myself to you.” 

If nature knows the laws of nature, how much more should we know the laws of the kingdom? How much more prepared would we be? How much more in sync with Yahweh would we be? How much more discerning would we be? How much more growth would we see? 

And how do we learn these things? Study the word. Don’t just read it. Study it. Find mentors that can teach you. Download the free Logos Bible app and start researching. And pray that the Holy Spirit would guide you in all things.

The seasons are shifting, friends. Not just physically. I feel it more than ever. And for what’s coming, we cannot forsake fellowship. We cannot just read a few verses and call it a day. We cannot just pray before bed and goto sleep. The Lord is calling for watchmen on the wall. He is calling for intimacy with Him in the secret place. There’s a reason it’s called the secret place. Commanders of armies don’t meet at Starbucks. 

Wait on the Lord. Meditate on scripture. Wash your family in the word. Speak life to them, and yourself. Because who knows but the Lord whether the “winter” will be long or not.
🌿 NEW ARTICLE in your Homestead Herbalist Membersh 🌿 NEW ARTICLE in your Homestead Herbalist Membership! 

Meet burdock (Arctium lappa). For 3,000 years it has been one of the most respected roots in the field.

Its actions read like a quiet inventory of God’s design:
• Alterative, the old “blood purifier”
• Lymphatic, to move a sluggish system
• Bitter, to wake up digestion and the liver
• Diuretic and diaphoretic, for gentle elimination
• Anti-inflammatory and antioxidant

And the uses herbalists reach for most:
• Stubborn skin conditions like eczema, psoriasis, acne, and boils
• Lymphatic congestion and swollen glands
• Liver and digestive support
• Achy, rheumatic joints

But you know I won’t hand you more than the science can carry. The strongest human study showed burdock tea lowering inflammatory markers in people with knee arthritis. Most of the bigger claims still live in animal and cell research. Promising, not proven. But sometimes, traditional testimonies outweigh science. That is always the case with burdock.

Read this entire in-depth dive with a HOMESTEAD HERBALIST membership. 

🌿 Comment BURDOCK and I’ll send the article straight to your inbox
I did my continuing education assignments for natu I did my continuing education assignments for natural healthcare today while alone at home with my kids while they acted like bouncing squirrels. I stayed up until almost midnight last night putting the final edits on a @homesteadersofamerica podcast episode (coming out tonight or tomorrow!) I responded to emails and texts, paid bills and prayed while I was nursing the baby to sleep. I checked the garden for bugs and produce while getting ready for a milk delivery. And in a few weeks I’ll throw back in homeschooling a 7 and 4 year old (the almost 17 year old is well on his way to being done) on top of other things—housework, fellowship dinners, and all the things not listed.

So when you tell me that you’re busy. That you don’t have time to accomplish anything in your life. That you don’t have time to build relationships and community. Or that you’re stressed and exhausted and always tired. Please tell me that you have utilized your time to its fullest, too. Because as a no-nonsense kind of person with a high capacity, you’re not fooling me if you just have a low capacity to deal with life. 

Your dreams are on the other side of exhaustion. 
Your pay raise or extra income is on the other side of sleepless nights and long hours.
Your better parenting is on the other side of inconvenience.
Your deeper marriage is on the other side of yielding your time and will.
Your refined skills are on the other side of prioritizing your time better. 
Your deeper relationship with Yahweh is on the other side of laying everything else down and making Him first in the day.

The list could go on forever. But at the end of it you’ll come to the realization that every person in the world has the same 24 hours in the day. The difference? Some use those hours more wisely than others, understanding that some seasons require less, and some seasons require more. 

Others want to do the bare minimum, call it a day, and then complain about how mediocre or exhausting their life is.

Pick which one you want to be—and whichever you choose, you’ll be the steward of. It’s a pet peeve of mine—I hope you choose to go higher. I’m cheering for you.
Since 2023, I have not been able to shake it. Aft Since 2023, I have not been able to shake it.

After dreams, after long conversations with the Lord, I keep coming back to the same word: something is coming, and God is calling His people to a modern-day Goshen.

Here is what stops me every time. When the plagues fell on Egypt—the hail, the darkness so thick you couldn’t see your own hand—there was one region that still had sunlight and bread on the table. Goshen. 

When God showed Pharaoh a famine was coming, He used Joseph to govern a nation and provide. Goshen was a place of refuge for his family.
 
Same nation, famine, plagues. Two completely different outcomes. The difference was simply that Goshen was where God’s people dwelt. Refuge is the whole point.

During the Exodus plagues, because they happened so suddenly, God providentially sheltered Goshen—the land where His people dwelt. 

But Goshen didn’t happen the same way during Joseph’s time. Years before the famine ever came, God warned Joseph, and Joseph stored up grain through seven years of plenty so his people would eat when the whole land went hungry. 

That is the pattern: provision prepared before the crisis, a people set apart, a storehouse standing ready when the world runs empty—spiritually and physically.

I believe God will once again build both times of Goshen.

So the question isn’t “will this happen again?” The question is, will you be ready? Why is the church not already prepared?

We have built beautiful buildings and polished productions. But when the shelves go bare, what is in the storehouse? 

Will we stand in the same line as everyone else? 

Not me. Not my family. Not the people who sit at my table.

This is Acts 4—land laid down, abundance shared, not one needy person among them. That church had become Goshen, and we can be that again. This isn’t archaic. It’s a blueprint for survival and provision.

The time to build is now. Not out of fear, but out of grace, mercy, and obedience.

Comment GOSHEN to read the entire new Substack…

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