“Aaaaaargh!
How has child-rearing got so… so complicated? It’s as if you have to keep them
on some sort of permanent high of engagement and happiness.”
From Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy,
by
Helen Fielding
Me, age 40
Over a breakfast of egg sandwiches and café-au-lait, my good friend Sarah and I catch up on things.
Over a breakfast of egg sandwiches and café-au-lait, my good friend Sarah and I catch up on things.
She’s talking about a woman she knows. “I can’t
call her for mom support because she doesn’t feel real to me,” Sarah says. “She will literally stop a conversation
with another adult to get down on the floor and play Legos with her children if
they ask. She thinks every moment with them should be quality time. This is
frustrating because I don’t believe that every moment needs to be a ‘moment.’”
I feel the same way. Maybe it’s because I was
raised by parents who didn’t hover: once in awhile they played with my sisters
and me, but usually they tossed us the garden hose (or Monopoly game or Play-Doh)
and told us to go have fun.
Sarah continues, “My kids are signed up for
after-school activities, but all they want to do is ride their bikes, play on
the jungle gym, and run around outside. I let them do that the last few
weekends, and they arrived at dinnertime hungry and dirty. It was great. To me,
that is just as important as playing Legos with them.”
My twin daughters have never been into Legos, but Sarah’s
point is spot-on. Years ago, I learned that trying to coordinate one moment after
the next is not only impossible: it’s insane.
When my girls were one-and-a-half, for example, I
took it upon myself to orchestrate a trip to a little local beach. Never mind
that they were perfectly content splashing in the plastic baby pool in our
backyard: I packed up our stuff, pried them away from the pool, and drove
across town. All while congratulating myself on being such an awesome mom.
In the parking lot of the beach, I got out of the
car and was at once dismayed to find that the air reeked of algae. But hell if we
were going to turn around and go home! I had made us a picnic lunch and coated
the girls in sunscreen! We were going to do
this!
I threw the girls and our supplies into the double
stroller. After only a couple steps, however, I realized that there was no
paved pathway to the beach, only sand.
Have you ever attempted to push a double stroller
– or any stroller, for that matter –
through sand?
It was not a pleasant experience for me or my
daughters.
Once we finally arrived at our destination, I took
one look at the water and muttered a few choice words. The reason it stunk like
algae was because algae absolutely blanketed
the water like a fuzzy green comforter.
“Time to go, girls!” I hollered, trying in vain to
turn the stroller around. I was sweating, my daughters were wailing, and I
wondered why we hadn’t just stayed at our house, where their idea of adventure was
as gratifying and uncomplicated as pulling all the tissues out of a Kleenex box
and feeding Cheerios to our blind dog.
***
As I leave my breakfast with Sarah, where this
whole conversation started, I think about another friend of mine. Like many
moms, she has come to accept that it’s OK to not coordinate every last moment
for her children.
“I always used to plan these huge birthday parties
for my son, with classmates and presents, and he enjoyed none of it,” she says.
“I think for a long time I needed to do these parties because that’s what
you’re ‘supposed’ to do. But then I realized a few years ago that all he really
wants for his birthday is a day with his favorite people – his family. And
maybe some cake.”
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