Playtime at Sunday with My Baby! 💜

in Motherhood7 days ago

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Pushed by a quiet need to breathe outside the walls of the week, I took my daughter out for a long Sunday that felt like a small rebellion against routine. The air was warm enough to loosen the stiffness that sometimes forms around my thoughts, and watching her run ahead of me with that fearless softness only kids have reminded me of how easy joy can be when I stop thinking like an adult who is always rushing somewhere. I felt my steps lighten without any conscious effort, as if her energy pulled me into a space where everything slowed down. The sky was a soft blue that made the afternoon feel wide open, and I realized how much I had missed these simple moments, the kind where nothing is forced and nothing needs to be earned. Being out there with her made me understand that childhood is not only something kids live through but something mothers can revisit if we allow ourselves to step out of the usual cage.

Lifted by that strange return to my own forgotten girlhood, I watched her navigate the playground with a certainty that felt like a small miracle. She climbed, jumped, spun, laughed, and every movement carried the quiet message that life can be taken in with the whole body. I joined her in the games, not in a performative way, but as someone who genuinely wanted to feel the slide under my hands or the swing lifting my feet off the ground. Something in me softened when I realized how often adults take themselves too seriously, as if gravity were a moral obligation. Sunday gave me the excuse to loosen that grip. I noticed how her eyes brightened each time I decided to be silly with her, how she leaned into my presence more fully when I was actually present. These are the things that do not appear in parenting manuals but shape the emotional memory of a child.

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Rather than staying inside with the familiar weight of chores and unfinished tasks, we let the day unfold in a way that felt almost defiant. There is a difference between entertaining a child and sharing life with them, and this Sunday showed me the line that separates the two. When we walked along the grass, she kept picking little leaves and handing them to me as if they were treasures, and I took them with the same reverence she placed in the gesture. I kept thinking about how children teach us humility without intending to, because everything they offer comes from a place untouched by fear of judgment. In that simplicity there is a truth adults spend years trying to remember. The world becomes less heavy when I let her guide the pace instead of dragging her into mine.

Stepping into the late afternoon, we sat for a while just watching other families scattered around, each wrapped in their own small universe. I felt something settle inside me, a reminder that connection is built in these slow, shared pockets of time. She rested her head against my arm, and I felt that warm trust that only a child can give without hesitation. It made me think about the quiet responsibility of motherhood, not the exhausting one that comes with forms and schedules, but the deeper one that asks me to let her see my humanity. Not the polished part, but the real, imperfect, curious one. When she laughed at something simple, her voice carried a clarity that made everything else in my mind go still. I understood then how important it is to step out with her, to leave the enclosed spaces that shape our mood more than we admit, and to choose movement over stagnation.

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Taken by that calm sense of completion, we walked home as the light began to fade, our clothes slightly dusty and our hair messy from playing. I felt lighter, not because the day had been extraordinary, but because it reminded me of something easy to forget. Joy does not grow in silence or confinement. It grows in action, in sunlight, in moments when mothers let themselves be children again, even if only for an afternoon. This Sunday reminded me that motherhood is not only about guiding but also about joining, about allowing ourselves to rediscover pieces of who we once were before responsibility shaped our posture. When we finally reached home, she held my hand with that soft grip that always undoes me a little. I realized that these Sundays will not last forever, and that is exactly why they matter so much.

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All photographs and content used in this post are my own. Therefore, they have been used under my permission and are my property.

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I like that you mentioned there is a difference between entertaining a child and sharing life with them. Being silly with kids sometimes reminds us that we are just kids too. We are kids at heart, and although we may have aged, there's still that inner child in each one of us that wants to catch up on the playing, the fooling around, and just having fun with life.

Maybe we can learn a thing or two about joy and about just having fun from children!

Im not a role model in any way, shape or form but I try to be for my baby, no matter what

That's a very nice thought. You're a good mom. We're proud of you!

Qué hermoso cómo describes ese domingo, no solo como un paseo, sino como un reencuentro contigo misma a través del juego con tu hija. Me encantó la idea de que las madres también pueden volver a ser niñas por un rato 😊

Es lo mínimo que podemos hacer. Ser niñas por nuestras niñas.

Que lindo, ya me tocará vivir esos momentos 🥰