Not the mother I thought I'd be
Categories: Just For Moms, Preschoolers, Special Needs

When my life was very clear and perfectly manageable and I had all the answers to everything, which is to say, back before I became a mother, I'd sometimes see other parents with their children and think, Absolutely not. I will never do that when I have children of my own.
My list of "nevers" was firm and my resolve was strong. There was equipment I was never going to buy: anything loud or squeaky; anything that took up more space in a room than a couch; anything that was made of plastic, especially products with colors so bright they made your teeth hurt.
I was never going to be one of those parents who interrupted the person they were speaking with, mid-sentence, to issue directives to their kids, stop picking your nose this instant, because it was just so rude. My children would never be fussy eaters, or unappreciative of gifts. They wouldn't say naughty things, or be mean to each other, or me.
You know where this is going, right? I mean, no plastic? Did I even have a hope of sticking to these plans? Every last one of them, tossed over the wooden porch railing like so many plastic play fruit I find dotting the lawn below, making it seem as if our house has been the site of a wild, raucous party culminating in a great mock-food fight.
My closets are crammed with loud and squeaky toys; until we "shared" it with another family, we had a giant plastic slide in our dining room (in loud, bright colors, of course). I can't remember the last conversation I had that didn't involve an interruption of some sort; one of my boys will only eat bacon, peanut butter toast, and milk. We've had our share of frowny-faces when the firetruck wasn't the exactly-right firetruck, or when the big box wrapped in shiny paper contained a sweater.
Everyone in my family has been called a poo-poo head by everyone else, at one time or another, and I've been told that I'm mean and that I don't love them or worse, that they don't love me.
Too, I've been up all hours of the day and night drenched in any manner of fluids; I've eaten more sandwich crusts and salt-less pretzels and de-icinged cupcakes and almost-finished Popsicles than I could have ever imagined. I've slept: standing up, sitting down, lying on the floor, leaning against a wall, tucked in a corner, and yes, even once on a toilet.
I've answered the door with peaches in my hair; with round, black rings around my eyes from the time we all drew silly faces on each other (those markers that say they are washable really aren't, in my experience); with my nursing top mis-buttoned or my pants on backwards. I've worn mismatched socks, mismatched underwear, mismatched shoes (by mistake of course).
All of it, and we haven't even reached the teenage years yet.
There are bigger things, too. I never thought I'd wait until I was in my 30s to begin having kids. I didn't think we'd have any trouble conceiving, or that there would be a four-plus year gap between my kids' ages. I never, ever would have guessed twins; and of course, Avery. Never once did I imagine myself the mother of a child with special needs.
If there were a way to go back in time and speak with the young woman I once was, I don't know if I'd do it. I don't know that I'd be able to explain to her that the things she's holding on to are all the wrong things: that happy children are more important than the way your house looks; that interrupting because your children are speaking to you means you are paying attention to them; that the words my kids use to describe their feelings about a gift that disappoints them or their thoughts about each other or their impressions of the world around them are completely their own, and that even when they say the wrong things, it's their right to say them.
Or this: that someday, I'd be grateful that I'm not that woman I used to be. Instead, I'm more likely to listen before I speak. I'm more likely to consider all my options, whatever they might be. I laugh more. I play more. I try new things; I make-it-up-as-I-go more. Being mother to my kids has required me to reinvent myself a thousand times, and each new version feels like an upgrade.
Which isn't to say it's been easy--change never is, for me. I'm the kind of person who would still be wearing my very first favorite pair of wedge-sandals with the leather straps that my 12-year-old self bought with her babysitting money, or the fantastic poncho with the big pocket in front that I wore all through college. But no, life is change.
The other day my son Bennett and I were walking home together. The sun was behind us, and as we walked, our silhouettes cast long shadows in front of us. A big one, and a little one, holding hands. He's at the in-betweens: in-between 4 and 5, in-between a toddler and a child, in-between his older brother Carter and his littler one Avery. He has so much ahead of him--it's as if he's standing in front of a door, almost ready to walk through. But it's scary.
For a moment, his shadow disappears into mine. Then it reappears. He notices, and begins playing with it, making it go, then come, then go, in and out of mine, in and out of me. His shadow begins to run and mine follows, chasing him all the way down the lane, laughing and giggling, until I spread my shadow-arms wide and wrap them around my shadow boy, envelope him in my mama love.
From our house to yours, Happy Mother's Day!
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Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Claudia 5-08-2008 @ 10:34AM
I'm all stingy-eyed and nosed, trying not to cry, this is all so true, what you write here. I love being a mother, and I love all of us being mothers! What a good deal.
Happy Mothers Day to all!!
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Kara Brown 5-08-2008 @ 11:46AM
That was beautiful. Thank you for putting
things into perspective on a day when I am feeling
grouchy and overworked as a Mom... It is ALL worthwhile
and wonderful, every last moment of it.
Happy Mother's Day to you!
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Courtney 5-08-2008 @ 12:03PM
Very beautiful as always.
I wanted to share something with you. 2 weeks ago a family we know lost their special nees child at the age of 22 months. It was a battle of 22 months of a baby that was brain dead, but theirs. She was deaf and blind because of this, but she was theirs. I spoke of this with a family friend who attended her funeral and was telling me about the exerpt from a book that the father shared. It was from your book. Thank you so much for putting it out there and letting everyone there be told about how it wasn't the life they expected, but it was theirs anyways!
God bless you and your beautiful family.
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Jessica 5-08-2008 @ 12:05PM
Oh, how I love it when you speak of Mama Love. It is so very different than any other love and certainly deserves, and requires, it's own name.
And, of course, I cried.....the shadow running, laughing, and enveloping arms.
I have changed so unbelievably much since becoming a mother and it is all so wonderful. There is not one aspect I would take back; not my poochy belly, my fierce empathy, or my sleep deprived nights. Nothing is better than this. And yes, it is so true that we upgrade. Definitely an upgrade.
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jennifergrafgroneberg 5-08-2008 @ 12:29PM
Thank you for reading, my friends!
And Courtney, wow. Just wow. Thank you for sharing this story with me--I have big gloppy tears in my eyes from all of it--the family, their loss, and mostly, their love. It's what remains. Always, love.
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vickiforman 5-08-2008 @ 12:31PM
You left out the part about what being a mother does for one's writing... Lovely, wonderful, brave and true, as always.
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Heidi Hass Gable 5-08-2008 @ 2:29PM
Jennifer,
Thank you for such a beautiful posting!
Like Kara above - this was a much needed and appreciated reminder of what is most important in my life.
And even though I'm very proud of my parenting, it still helps to hear that I'm not the only one who experiences the struggles of motherhood!
Happy day!
Heidi
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TuscanMom 5-08-2008 @ 7:11PM
You are such a great writer! I thoroughly enjoyed this post! Thank you!
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grace runner 5-09-2008 @ 2:08PM
Dear Jen,
You give words to the journeys of being a mom; the nevers-but-dids, the unknowns-to-wisdom, the once was-to-now am, the fear of failure-to-peace of love. All precious, all a privilege and all gifts to us as mothers.
Happiest of Mother's Day to one of the kindest moms I know.
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borgreen 5-10-2008 @ 12:38AM
This is just what this mommy needed to read today. Happy Mothers Day!
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Sue 5-11-2008 @ 10:50PM
Beautiful! I love thinking of whether or not I would go back and talk to the girl who thought she had motherhood all figured out. (The one who didn't have any kids yet:-) I laugh when I think that I have synthesized motherhood down to a few essential principals - none of them the ones I would have thought. Eat. Sleep. Respect others. Take a bath every couple days. Get as much fresh air as possible.
And I love how your view of an interrupting or disappointed child has changed to how it feels to be the child and not the mom. That is so powerful! Thank you for sharing this!
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Jennifergrafgroneberg 5-12-2008 @ 3:46PM
Sue! I love this! So simple, and yet, some days, such a challenge...
Renee 5-13-2008 @ 9:10AM
Just wanted to let you know how much I look forward to reading your columns every week & how much I love your writing. I'm so glad Michelle introduced us, and that we manage to hook up with you, Tom & the boys from time to time.
I'm in awe of the job young moms like you & Michelle do with your children. Seems like "my" generation was too busy trying to do so many of the things that weren't really that important after all (like a clean house, nice yard, etc.) that we missed out on the simple fun of spending time & playing with our kids. That's what we were taught, but it sure cost us.
It makes my heart happy to see young families like yours and Michelle & Eric's; you realized what the REALLY important things in life are much earlier than some of us!
Renee (Michelle's mom)
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dawdler 5-21-2008 @ 11:41PM
I always thought I'd be a mom one day but I'm coming to grips with the reality that it isn't happening. I don't know how to feel or what to say to my family or anything.
Enjoy the peaches in your hair.
daw
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