The day I realized that Moms were judgy and that I didn’t’
fit into the social norm of motherhood was a cold day in Canada.
I was at the grocery store with my then two-year-old son, in
Ontario, Canada in January- the dead of winter with inches upon inches of snow
on the ground and bone-chilling wind in the air- and he had stripped his socks
and shoes off and was roaming the aisles unshod. A child with ADHD and other comorbidities, my
son often experienced hypersensitivities to textures and fabrics. Sock issues
were constant until around the age of three when he was able to effectively
articulate that it was the seam inside the sock that ran along the top of his
toes that caused him so much bother. (Our
yearlong journey to find a seamless sock was painstaking, always ending in
frustration with each new brand and type of socks we bought. In quest of just
one brand or type of sock that was not troublesome, I could have saved myself
the distress - financial and emotional- had I known the seams were the distress
culprit, and thought early on to turn his socks inside out, as he still wears
them today, 12 years later.) So, there
we were, in the midst of a January blizzard in the middle of the grocery store;
him- barefoot and befuddled, and me- “on my toes,” and attentive to the stares
and snickers of judgment being flung in our direction. A believer in natural consequences and a
compassionate advocate for eliminating seams deemed troublesome by my two year
old child with ADHD, I opted to let my son wander happily barefoot through the
grocery store. Ultimately, I trusted in
the end, that the briskness of the snow would be a sufficient reason for him to
endure the agony of his socks from the grocery store door to the car. Was it
really worth it after all- the power struggle otherwise? A peaceful, barefooted ten minutes in the
grocery store fetching milk, cereal, bread, ketchup, and crackers, or an excruciating
indeterminate amount of time grappling with my child, whom I knew, better than
any one of those judgy mothers, was not about to entertain even a millisecond
in the socks and shoes he stripped off with a vengeance upon our entrance. For the parents I was sharing space with in
this grocery store, I was committing a monumental parental faux pas. Why, oh
why, are people so eager to tell you that your parental choices suck? The lady
behind me at the checkout, for instance, “You know, there are germs on the
floor, and it is 20 degrees below zero outside with the wind chill, he really
should be wearing socks and shoes, and also a jacket.” Of course, she had to
notice the absentee jacket- another problematic article of clothing for my
perpetually hot-blooded son.
Parenting is a tough and thankless job- without every move being
critiqued by another parent. Throw that in the mix, and it is even harder. Motherhood should be one of the most uniting experiences in the
world. The profound truth is that becoming a parent changes your life FOREVER,
and there is no other bond greater than a parent’s love for their child. So, why, in the grocery store that day wasn’t
I given the benefit of the doubt? Why didn’t all the other Moms rally around me
and bestow high praise at escaping the wrath of a headstrong toddler’s temper
tantrum? I mean, we have all been there, so where were my high fives and thumbs
ups?
We are our own self’s worst critic because we know we are
being judged. It is maddening. We are plagued with the fear of being judged,
so we undermine our own parenting decisions. Isn’t that ridiculous!? I knew at
that moment, that cold day in the grocery store that this was not going to work
for me. Not only was I being judged for my decisions, but also for my kids. Have
you ever tried to say anything other than candy sprinkled covered compliments
about your kid to another mother? I once told a “fellow” Mom that my kid was so
unnecessarily loud you could hear him from two states away. I mean, why lie? He
was. It was annoying. She looked at me like I had just tarred and feathered my
mother. WHAT is the point of parenthood if we cannot be brutally honest about
our kids? This shit is not easy. My kids
are loud, and bossy, and selfish, and stinky, and difficult, and so many other
things…Yes, of course, they are great; however, they are humans with
limitations and character flaws. Why are parents always trying to promote their
kids as something more or better than they are and concealing their
shortcomings? I don’t get it, which is what makes me enemy #1 of the Everything-Is-Coming
Up-Daisies-Parenthood Club. My kids have issues. I have issues. And, what is
wrong with that?! What is wrong with being at your wits end sometimes, and
venting that your daughter is so certifiably headstrong that the only
reasonable thing you can think to do is put her in the garbage can?
None of us knows
what we are doing. I have moments of total mothering brilliance followed almost
immediately by complete idiocy. Oh, yes. Like the Clove Sticks. When my oldest
son was two, for some senseless reason clove sticks were his go-to for wreaking
havoc. I would watch my then husband re-direct him, distract him, and
continuously relocate the clove sticks from cabinet to cabinet. One day, on my
watch, my son made it to the clove sticks. I watched as he excitedly ripped
open the package with reckless abandon. “Knock yourself out big guy”, I
thought, “You’ve finally got your pot of gold.” With utter shock and sheer
horror, my then husband walked in as he chomped down on the clove stick…only to
be spat back out with authority in a matter of seconds. I’m HUGE into natural
consequences, as I may have mentioned, and this to me was one of the best examples
of a natural consequence. Never again did we have to relocate the clove sticks.
I started ingeniously positioning them within his sight and reach- just because
I could. He wouldn’t so much as even look at another clove stick again. I was
so impressed with myself. Finally, I
could offset the fact that only two short years earlier, I brought my newborn
son home from the hospital in a toddler car seat. Yes, that’s right. Newborn + Toddler car seat. We put it in facing backwards, and even swung by the
fire station to ensure proper installment for good measure. We were set to
bring our first little bundle of joy home in complete and total safety. I could not understand what was
wrong here- why wasn’t he sitting snuggly in the seat? His whole upper body was
flopping forward, hunched over. He wasn’t bending or sitting, just folding over
forward. He was screaming. Oh God, what was wrong with my son that he couldn’t sit up in his car seat? Already, this is the kid I have? I sat in the back
next to him on the ride home. I put one hand on his chest, keeping him upright
flushed against the back of the car seat. I put my other hand on his forehead,
keeping his head back and upright against the back of the seat. I kept saying,
“Something is wrong with him.” Come to find out upon arriving home, an eager
friend- with no children like us- had bestowed us the gift of the toddler car
seat…for when he was a TODDLER. Another
(smarter) family member had purchased a stroller travel system for us, which
included an infant carrier car seat…for INFANCY. Duh. Newborn babies can’t sit
up all nice and straight. They don’t bend!
Well, shit, who knew?! So, finally, after two years, I found vindication as a
parent from a clove stick. I loved that clove stick. I did good with that clove
stick.
So, why can’t we parents share both the brilliance and the
idiocy? I have one Mom friend that I can be completely at home with, uninhibited
with about both my parenting genius and parenting stupidity. I can confide in
her all of my kids’ drawbacks, disadvantages, difficulties, and dimness without
any condemnation. No wonder she is my best friend. Her son and my middle son
are best friends. I am pretty sure my son would choose her family over me and
his own family. One nice, sunny day, she hands me this folded up, tattered piece
of paper, and says, “Here, I found this when we were packing up M’s room. They
were playing around on the old typewriter upstairs last week, and M says S
accidentally left it.” She then handed me a glass of bourbon. I don’t drink
bourbon. And certainly not at noon on a Sunday. I look cautiously at her, and
then warily at the paper in my hand. I slowly open it, not sure what I was about
to discover. I read… It appears, my son (ten, at the time) typed this poem, or,
rap song (We aren’t entirely sure which one it is- a poem, or a song; perhaps,
it is a rap poem.) on her old typewriter. In this rap sonnet, he included every
horrendous cuss word you could ever imagine, with the glorious F word appearing
about every other word. It was laced with slang words and references about
life’s injustices, social deviations, and modern day thugs. It was gangster. It
was a powerfully brute, gnashing your teeth kind of literary masterwork. It
rhymed, it was written in verses, it was long, and stirring, and loud, and
angry, and in your face. It was shocking. Horrifying. My sweet, loveable,
charming, handsome, softhearted, boyishly delightful S. Where the f*ck did this
come from?! Oh my god, was he troubled? Was my kid a thug? How did this
happen?! Where have I gone wrong?! I could not unread what I had just read. How
do I make this go away? Bourbon. I guzzled my bourbon, and I folded that little
sucker right back up, shoved it in my pocket, and vowed never to speak of it
again. However, there was a problem… a witness…my best friend. I glanced at
her, trying not to make direct eye contact. I wasn’t sure what I wanted to do
here. My options as far as I saw were 1.) Run away and cut all ties. I mean,
what could she possibly think about my son, and my clearly deficient mothering
skills? 2.) Leave, do not pass go and immediately enroll me and my son into
counseling. We obviously needed it! I tried to feel her out. I could see her choosing
her words for when she next spoke. This is it, I thought, I had finally lost my
only actual friend because my kids and I are completely screwed up. Why can’t
we just be normal!?! She is going to
tell me that she doesn’t think M and S should be friends any longer, and for me
not to call her, she will call me. She looks at me, and says “So... I was
thinking…” Here it comes. “Moving forward,” she continues, “Shall we refer to S
as ‘SDawg’ or ‘SDizzle’ or maybe ‘Rapmaster SDizzle,’ or ‘SD’ ‘BigDawgS’? We
could set him up a little writing studio to feed his alter ego…and maybe get
some gangsta clothes to fit the bill…We can call you ‘MommaDawg’, what do you
think?" And then, it came… the irrepressible, unrelenting laughter sprang out
of her, she was spitting bourbon out of her nose. “What the hell is wrong with
your kid!?” she asked through hysterical tears. At that moment, I lost it. We
sank down to the floor in a wild, uncontrollable, snorting fit of laughter.
There we were, two moms, winging it. With their growth, our kids
present us new and puzzling situations that we are completely unprepared for.
Like the amateurs we are, we handle these newfound quandaries with forbidding
truth, mirth, and mockery… and I am home. Home in the scrupulous tolerance and
acceptance of dysfunction. THIS parenthood
society is exactly for me.
We need to become a community that supports one another
through everything dysfunctional, irregular, weird, horrifying, magnificent,
painful, beautiful, awkward, and hard; rather than a community that tries to
tear each other down. Support is so powerful, and judgment is so damaging. We need much, much more of the former; and, much, much less of the latter.
Love your story and the way you share it Heather! Keep up the good work. Seeing your story and what you go through makes me a more empathetic person. :)
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