HUMANUM, Spring 2013, A MOTHER’S WORK
Rule of Life
Holly Pierlot, A Mother’s Rule of Life: How to Bring Order to Your Home and Peace to Your
Soul (Sophia Institute Press, 2004), 200 pages
Reviewed by Catherine Sienkiewicz
When I first read Holly Pierlot’s book, I was still new to marriage and family life, with only our
infant daughter at home with me. I was immediately attracted to the title (could there be a title
more appealing to a mother?) and I bought and read the book very quickly. However, the
problems which led Pierlot to establish her own “mother’s rule” didn’t resonate much with me.
She was a homeschooling mother of five children who felt so overwhelmed by the demands on
her that she was at a breaking point. I, on the other hand, did not have the same dilemma. I was
staying home full time with my six-month-old daughter, and I had a lot of time on my hands. I
was already struggling with feelings of boredom, and structuring every hour of my days, as
Pierlot suggested, seemed like something that would only exacerbate that problem. With a little
irritation, I put the book away and forgot about it.
It was with no small sense of irony, therefore, that I read Pierlot’s book again later and realized
just how in sync I now was with the frustrations she described, and also with the path it led her to
follow.
In A Mother’s Rule of Life, Pierlot takes the reader into her past, sharing her tumultuous teenage
and early adult years, her return to the Catholic Church after a long separation, her marriage to
her husband Phillip, and the difficulties of their early married life. She comes to the point of
crisis when they have five children, whom Holly is homeschooling. She feels called to educate at
home, but is ready to enroll all the children in school because of the disorder and chaos she is
experiencing. There just do not seem to be enough hours in the day, and her spiritual life is
suffering.
Pierlot writes as a Catholic mother, for Catholic mothers. But a casual perusal of any bookstore
today would testify that her crisis experience is one that many people struggle with every day, in
all walks of life. There is no shortage of books trying to help us organize our precious time, our
homes, our professions, and actually “get things done,” as one popular secular book promises.
And Pierlot’s promises are similar to the ones they advertise: if you make a rule of life, many
things will improve. Your finances will be in order, your relationships will be better, your work
will get done and your anxiety will decrease.
This should motivate many women to read and consider her book, which has many things to
offer. It is a little bit Dave Ramsey, a little bit FlyLady, a little bit parenting guru and marriage
counselor. But, as she herself points out, a desire for order and a clean house won’t be enough to
keep most at-home mothers committed to a fairly strict daily schedule, and her own motivation
went much deeper over time. Ultimately, it was her desire truly to understand and live out her
vocation as wife and mother – and a follower of Christ on the way of perfect love – that kept her
focussed not just on her daily schedule of home and parenting duties, but on her greater plan of
life which includes it.
HUMANUM, Spring 2013, A MOTHER’S WORK
Within that plan, Pierlot highlights five areas of importance which must be examined and
provided for in any mother’s rule of life. In order of priority they are: Prayer, Person, Partner,
Parent, Provider. Much of the book is dedicated to explaining these “Five P’s,” why they are
necessary categories, and why they must remain in that order. Throughout this part of the book,
Pierlot shares many of her own mistakes and trials in all of these aspects of her vocation, as well
as the inspirations – through prayer and life experience – which helped her to align her life as
wife and mother to the calling that was being revealed to her.
There is a photograph on the book’s cover, depicting the arching walls which form the cloister in
a monastery. The title “A Mother’s Rule of Life” similarly makes the connection to the Rule
followed by men and women in consecrated religious life. And although the author never refers
to it directly, her explanations of what falls within the scope of a mother’s rule are in many ways
a description of the evangelical counsels (poverty, chastity, and obedience) which are at the core
of the vows of a consecrated person, and which are all directed toward the perfection of charity.
Among those who have read and considered Pierlot’s book, I have met a number of women who,
despite sharing the “overwhelmed” experience the author describes, cannot move past the
aversion they have toward the idea of a daily schedule. Or, perhaps, they are too overburdened
with their many duties and concerns to devote more energy to examining their lives and creating
a rule of life. From my own experience, I can say that this is certainly an area where mothers can
use more guidance, encouragement, and assistance. As Pierlot quotes from Dom Chautard’s The
Soul of the Apostolate: “Let the following conviction become deeply impressed upon your mind:
namely, that a soul cannot lead an interior life without a schedule…and without a firm resolution
to keep it all the time.”
If there is truth in this statement, then what an important task it is for mothers to examine their
time and, through thought and prayer, create and then follow a plan or rule of life. And yet what
a challenge for all mothers, (and even more so for those who are homeschooling their children),
for what career or vocation provides less structured time, or less direction on how to order each
day? There is every reason to believe that, with the help of Pierlot’s book, many mothers will be
both encouraged and relieved of some of the effort of this task.
Catherine Sienkiewicz is a wife and homeschooling mother of four. She lives in Virginia.