Friday, July 24, 2009
Sour
Julia, Sydney, Accounts Receivable
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
Sweet 'n' Sour
There are four.
But I only tell people about the three they can see. The fourth came first. He brought innocence and purity, which he took when he left. I haven’t told the other three about the first. Because I don’t know how to explain about really bad things.
When the next one came I stupidly forgot to hide the soft part of me. I left it exposed, like the new skin underneath a band-aid. I thought that nothing could hurt me any more.
I was wrong.
He cooed like a wounded owl. And he didn’t speak. Didn’t have a voice of his own. So I gave him mine knowing he might still never know what he meant to me.
The next one clung to me as if we were suddenly reunited after a long trip apart. Never leaving my side, resting in the place on my chest that seemed designed for the shape of his head. Asking me if I loved him over and over again until it became a game that we played. Silly to everyone else but fiercely serious to him. Making sure that I understood I could never leave him.
Then, a surprise. The last one born on the day the first was supposed to be. Coming into the world warm and kicking and squirming with life. Joy and guilt combining in a sweetly painful way like cinnamon gum. And in spite of everything, filling me with irrepressible hope.
For all four.
Tamar, Boston, MA, stay-at-home mom
Sour
I’m riding in the back of an ambulance with my eight-month-old. We’ve had a car accident. Max bumped his head on his car seat and the cop at the scene told me we could go right to the ER to have him checked, and of course I said yes. Max is crying, but not because of injury. He hates the strap they have tied around his head, around his body, to keep him still, When we get to the ER, I run in with Max before the cops. Two doctors swarm around me, but instead of being sympathetic, they snap. “Is this the first time he’s had an injury?” And then: “What did you do?”
“We had a car crash,” I say, but the doctors whisk Max from my hands and start examining him, shining lights in his eyes, testing his reflexes, and when they look at me, it is with disdain. It isn’t until one of the cops saunters in and confirms the accident, that things change. One of the doctors comes over and gives Max back to me, settling him in my arms. “He’s fine,” she says, smiling, and I hold him tight and all I can think is both how glad I am they look out for babies, and how dare you, how dare you.
Caroline, Hoboken, NJ, writer, http://www.carolineleavitt.com
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Sweet
Thursday, April 30, 2009
Sweet 'n' Sour
I'd just gotten used to playing house with my husband. We were like kids, inclined to sleep late, leaving dirty dinner dishes in the sink 'til morning, going out to eat when the urge struck. Now, not only was it impossible to finish the dishes, but I couldn't fold laundry, go to the bathroom or go anywhere without her crying, without her always needing something else.
One night during that first upside-down week at home with Charlotte, I exploded when my husband came through the door. "If she has a baby when she's like sixteen, I'm not helping her with it!" He looked very puzzled. "After all the years of taking care of her," I sobbed, trying to explain, "I'll want my life back. I don't like this new one very much."
She's almost sixteen now. She hasn't had a baby but she does have a boyfriend. He came over for dinner last week and they both helped with the dishes afterwards. She's talking about college. Sometime during her fifth grade year, I was stunned to realize that 6,570 days of full-time parenting is all you get: 18 years times 365 days. At that point I was already halfway through my tenure as Charlotte's full-time parent. I cried hard. Now 1,095 is all that is left. How will I adjust to the change when she leaves?
Monday, April 27, 2009
Sweet
From the moment he was born, I was infatuated. He emerged with perfectly muscled little arms, and his skin was the color of flame that burns closest to the wick.
As he grew, he would say amusing things. One summer day when he was three, we strolled through a graveyard and he remarked that the man with an enormous monument must have had a huge head. Yes, a large ego, I replied. He laughed at the funny sound of ego.
By the time he was five, he was known for his catch phrases – “A world without donuts is madness”, “When you turn TV off, you turn me off”, “White Castle – it’s worth the wait”. Yes, he watches TV, plays video games, and eats junky food, probably more than he should. But I try to surround him with subtle touches of beauty (macaroni and cheese on an antique Japanese porcelain plate) and kindness (never too tired to listen, help, fetch or find). He recognizes these things, and appreciates them.
He’s now 13, so my terms of endearment like Dandy Lion or Baby Grand are used less and less, but my infatuation hasn’t diminished. I believe that my role, as his mother, is to help him appreciate the beauty in all things, to impart beauty onto all that he touches, and to have a heart full of compassion. So far, I think I’ve done well by him, and that makes me very happy.
Friday, April 24, 2009
Sour
I just can’t get used to the shock of motherhood, the shock of having no sleep, most days no shower, a constant torrent of housework, and the feeling of overly caffeinated exhaustion day in and out. I feel at the end of every day that I’ve run a marathon.
Did our mothers feel this way, too?
I think our generation feels, in a way that our mothers’ did not, that we need to do everything a bit too perfectly so that our children don’t wind up addicted to video games, junk food, Prozac and ADD meds. We read all the books, buy all the latest gear to help bond with our baby, get the toy that will help promote social empathy and gross motor skills, avoid BPA, take DHA, but not the kind that might have mercury in it, and basically do everything within our power to ensure that they don’t grow up like we did: with Tang and fruit-roll-ups in the pantry, parents divorcing loudly in the bedroom at night after we’d gone to bed, and more time with the TV than anyone else.
But really, was it so bad for us? What are we running around like mad for, really? What are we trying to inoculate our children against?
I suppose, if I’m truly honest with myself, it is this – a most frightening prospect: I’m trying to prevent my child from feeling the way about me as I do about my parents.
- Cleo, New York, NY, stay-at-home mom