Tuesday, September 13, 2011

3-2-1 ... "See Ya!"


This summer we took a short trip to Sesame Place in Pennsylvania. We happened upon a ride called "Blast Off" that raises you into the air only to drop you over and over again. I was thankful that my pregnancy prohibited me from riding. I don't like heights and I especially don't like falling from them. Jeff decided he and Grace would ride and, I admit, I thought it was a terrible idea. In my mind, there was no way my little girl would not be in hysterics the first time the ride dropped her and she got the feeling of falling. Much to my surprise, I was wrong. She exited the ride laughing hysterically and asked to ride it again the next day. It was a moment where I had to hit refresh on what I thought I knew about my kid. It was the first time that I really felt her gaining independence from me and I found that both relieving and really disturbing!


We had another "Blast off" moment today, this one a bit more momentous. As I type this, Grace is at pre-school...her first day. We've spent months preparing, reassuring Grace that it would be fun, that she'd make new friends, learn a lot, have great snacks and that, after 2 and a half hours, Mommy would be back to pick her up. Our morning played out as planned -- wake up, get dressed, do hair, have breakfast, brush teeth, take some pictures and out the door. The part that had my stomach doing flips was the goodbye once we got to school. Unbeknownst to Grace, I cried quietly in the front seat the whole way there. I composed myself before we went in, said hello to her teachers, hung up her backpack...and Grace was off playing in the "kitchen" (not suprising to anyone who knows Grace!). As parents started to trickle out, I knew it was time to make my move. My stomach was in a knot and I was holding back tears, but I somehow eeked out, "Grace, Mommy's going to go now." I braced myself for the response. Would she cry? Would she cling to me and beg me not to go? Would she make it impossible for me to leave? Or would she do exactly what she did: not even look up from shopping cart she was now pushing around and say, so simply, "See ya." I simultaneously let out a breath of relief ... and yet I felt as though I was punched in the stomach.

When I was eighteen years old and left my parents' house for my first day of college, my mom stood in front of the door in the kitchen and refused to let me out despite my pleas to her not to make me late for my first class, World Civilizations. As she held her arms pasted across the door shouting, "You can't leave! I won't let you go!" I was annoyed and amused, but I definitely felt ready to physically remove my mother from my path so that I could get on with my education ... and my life. My mom, she wasn't ready. I didn't get that at the time, but I sure do get it now.

I always understood my relationship to Grace in this way: I am her mother. This means that my primary jobs are to protect her, provide for her, and teach her things she needs to know so that she can become an independent, responsible, and caring individual. I guess I didn't realize that there would be so much for me to learn about her, about my own mother, and about myself. As she has helped me to define my role as "Mommy," I realize I've come to rely on her to need me so that I can fulfill that role. In the moment today where she said "see ya," she didn't need me, and in that moment, I felt a little lost. So today I also hit refresh on what it means to be a mom and, as difficult as it is, I see that being a mom sometimes means letting go.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

grace makes snow on march 23rd so worth it!

Grace: Mom, come here I have to tell you something! Winter came back!

Me: Where did Spring go?

Grace: Winter fell on top of it.

Poetic, don't you think!?

Friday, March 18, 2011

Scrolling

Entering the 2nd trimester with "Thing 2" (a moniker used with the utmost affection), I don't sleep much these days. I wake up at 3:00 am and toss and turn until morning, trying unsucceedingly to light upon a thought that will give me some peace and lull me back to sleep. This morning, a memory occurred to me...sort of out of the blue. Don't brace yourself--it's not earth-shattering.

I was maybe 7 years old. It was a time in my life where I spent a lot of time with Nonnie. At any opportunity I had, I'd spend both weekend nights at her hourse. Anyway, it was a snapshot memory. I was watering her grass in the back yard. The sun was just going down, but it was still warm (Nonnie never watered her grass during the day; the water would just "burn off" in the sun). I meticulously covered ever square inch with the fine spray from the hose, glad to be doing it "all by myself." Angelo and Lillian were out in their yard, picking grapes or some such thing. Nonnie and the neighbors chat over the space that was their shared driveway.

I told you--nothing dramatic. But I had this thought that it was a lifetime ago. Another world that I was in at 7 years old, so remote and so different from the one I live in now. Where Alice, the upstairs tenant of Angelo and Lillian, could be single at 32 years old, have hair trailing down her back to her butt, walk to her job at the Super Duper every day...and be seen simply as a "nice lady" with no baggage, no story. Just a “nice lady.”

The thing that got me as I lay in bed this morning is that it wasn’t another world or a lifetime ago. It was a day. One day that was connected to today by all the other days in between. I hate to get too esoteric here, but it gave me a new way of thinking about my life, if even for a moment. It made me wonder when it happens that we stop seeing our days connected to all the other days? When do stories become separated by gulfs, with all that’s in between falling into hopeless irrelevancy? And what does that necessitate that we overlook?

Thoughts at 3:00 am rarely make a lot of sense…though they seem so wise at the time! I’m going to chew on this for a while…

Pieces of Mind's String Too Short to Use

reflections on being a mom...and being human