Archive for the ‘Mothering’ Category

It’s a good thing hearts heal

Monday, September 17th, 2007

I must break my little boy’s heart now and again.

It’s at the same time of day—you know the one. Just after your body has moved into that state of deep relaxation which allows you to do your night work—learning, remembering and problem solving—REM sleep. Then suddenly BHAM!! You’re called upon to mother in the dark.

I have confessed before, and clearly I need more work because my shortcoming remain: I am a better mother in the light. The dark voice is mostly silent when the light shines in. But woken out of that deep, vulnerable state, I suck. It must be a heart breaking experience for Michael. I am clearly not his Mum.

Saturday night, jolted out of my sleep and into the room, I could only think about how I was sick and tired of being disturbed during my sleep (me, me, me) and how Chuck suffers more from interrupted sleep than I (he’s going to be grumpy). I wanted Michael to just stop and go back to bed already!

I did not even attempt to problem solve or listen to his concern; I never even asked. I was too deeply into myself and Chuck’s issues. Even his tears left me unmoved. I heard them as theatrical, not real in my dark sleepy fog.

But then I made it worse. I got angry that he settled into the floor mattress in our bedroom (set-up because being near me seems to resolve any need he presents, with the added benefit that I don’t have to physically get up), and irrationally decided to add to the dynamic that he should stop sleeping with us. Why did I say that? What was the point in the dark of night, with 3 sleeps disrupted, when he would have settled down?

It was fear. I was talking from a fear of having an upset, cranky husband who needed to start the week rested, not exhausted. I take ownership of resolving these night wakings because it is me Michael wants. Ergo, I should be able to prevent these issues, my mind erroneously asserts in the dark.

I had another recent failure, when I reasoned that perhaps the middle-of-the-night accommodations in our room were just too comfortable and perhaps if I made them less ideal he would stay put in his bed. No, he didn’t stay put. We had a couple of nights of his waking up like clock-work, settling in and sleeping restlessly as his blankets came off repeatedly. That was cumulatively painful for Chuck who had been trying to get up to work-out at 6 a.m.. He lost his rhythm and his work-outs and spent the start of every day flogging himself and feeling tired. I felt like it was my fault.

I fear the failure.

Yet somehow, that fear doesn’t propel me to act from my heart which always resolves issues, it inspires knee-jerk, ineffective solutions and heightened adrenaline. All unhelpful for resolving a little boy’s problems and getting everyone back to sleep quickly. And I cannot in good conscience help but wonder where these crazy ideas come from in the middle of the night. They are so clearly not part of my make-up during the light, so where am I getting them?

It’s all completely irrational, and this discussion of it, total naval gazing. I should simply follow the fine example Chuck provided me on Saturday night and just give Michael what he so clearly needs for a fear of the dark which is obviously (obvious in the light of day) real. He (the one I was so worried would be wiped out by the disruption) got up, took Michael back to his bed and lay with him. That is the time honoured remedy for fear of the dark—company in it.

So it’s not naval gazing: it’s nothing less monumental than learning what mothering means. It means tuning out the voice in you which says in essence, leave me alone, when it’s inconvenient to be called upon to mother. It is my job to be his soft spot to land when he’s scared, hurt or unsure. I can’t control when I’ll be called upon to do my duty, I just have to be there to do it. That is what mothering is all about.

[And for the record, we’ve tried night lights and they seem to wake him and keep him awake. I am also afraid that the light will not allow him a full, healthy sleep, having read that we need darkness to produce the right conditions for sound sleep. So I compromise with a night light on in the adjacent bathroom.]

How I love thee

Thursday, September 13th, 2007

Let me count the ways.

I love the bravery mixed with trepidation I saw when you sat, strong and unflinching, as the dentist put needle after needle into your little gums. I love the strength you showed when you said that pulling your first front tooth hurt “a bit”, when I was singing and stroking your hair to prevent myself from crying at the sight. I love the goofy dance you did that same night at the front door when Nikki brought you a meal of soft Indian dishes. You wiggled out the strain of the day in her honour.

I love the way you show me with your body how you’ve learned a star fish can pull in its limbs, curing into a little ball to avoid “being eaten by a shark”. I love the mix of steadfast confidence and pure baby tears you’ve shown me at drop off at your new school. Your inner strength makes your deep vulnerability surprising to me still after 5 years.

I love the way your face lights up with pure joy as you jump into the lake unassisted, but closely watched, and you can’t help but burst with “I love you”s.

I love the laissez-faire way you decided that today would be the day you would begin jumping into the lake without safe parental arms to cushion your splash. You marched to the end of the dock and did it without fanfare or announcements. You just jumped!

I love the way you tried pushing and pulling, laughing and crying, yelling and whispering secrets with your cousin—all the while loving every minute of your new social life as a bigger girl. I loved hearing the way you found ways to needle her soft spots, and then strengthen your connection with a quiet “I love you”. Every moment was pure experimentation, learning and wonderment at the way another human being can behave.

I love the unbridled energy you bring to every step you take, every scene that plays out in your imagination and then onto our floor (your stage), and every breath I seize upon, waiting to see if I have to tell you not to….

I need these reminders today, this week and this month. I started September like everyone else excited to get back to work, started on new projects and the kids off into “their own thing”. But two weeks in, I’m remembering (again) that there is no “their own thing” yet. I am still their rock and their all. I cannot venture into my own selfish reverie about what I can get done today, because my days are still full of surprises.

I wake up unrested yet again because my little boy has again decided that he needs to be near the mother ship. He has to wake me up, find the mattress besides my bed and sleep fitfully enough to keep us from getting into REM sleep. I am not amused. I am “done” with being woken up for I can’t tell what. I am tired and want full nights of sleep again!

I am distracted from my to-do list, and float in the ambiguity that has become the work side of my life, because I’m not quite sure I can leave them to move in and out of school without my touch before and after. Her first tears at the door of class since she started Montessori 2 years ago serve only to remind me that I am still mother to two very small, inexperienced people who’ve just barely arrived on this planet. People who continue to look to me for certainty, reassurance and encouragement—even when they can’t tell me what they did this morning in school or seem to ignore me in favour of Diego.

It’s one of those sigh—breathe—take it for what it is—moments on which I look to Karen Miller for guidance. I can’t rush them, I can’t change them, I can’t predict them either. I have to be the flexible one, the one whose deep emotional pools refill automatically. I need to remember that every night they want more time, more stories, more lying-in, while I keep expecting them to grow out of those nurturing needs. Will they ever be full?

Remember…I love you, I tell them when they’re too far off to hear.

Naked truth

Thursday, June 7th, 2007

There’s a little bare bum behind that proud smile. It came upon him so quickly, I might not have been to blame for missing the source. After a year of “helping” him learn what no one can truly teach, he figured it out all by himself in a flash. Who knew flush could be a sound which provoked pride? (more…)

Carpe Diem

Monday, March 26th, 2007

It’s been a bit quiet around Mommy’s Groove recently. It’s not that I haven’t been living the groove every day — but rather that living the groove has kept me away from writing. (more…)

Losing the tone

Thursday, February 22nd, 2007

I dig in my heels and entrench my position further — and its not the kind of well reasoned, deeply felt through position one entrenches for. The voice of reason is cat calling to me, don’t say anything else. This tact isn’t working, shift course now or shut up. But the voice that has the floor is unyielding, stubborn in her intractability and escalating the discussion. She may even be showing distain for her adversary: an independent four and a half year old. I am not proud of myself, but at the same time I can’t seem to help it. (more…)

“Stamped” with purpose and protection

Monday, February 12th, 2007

You can see it in their eyes, the kids who have a sense of self and a sense of purpose. They are the ones who never fall between the cracks, they fit in where they shine and enjoy a comfortable social life. How do they get that way? (more…)

Is Immersion Right?

Monday, February 5th, 2007

There are some decisions with which I will just never be comfortable. I don’t shy away from making choices generally, but there are some that just don’t seem to have an option that I can feel certain about. (more…)

Unfocusing intense focus

Thursday, February 1st, 2007

“Unreachable” in the sense of being non-responsive, is not a quality in which I take pride. But it is a hard fact of my personality. Moving through the motions of organizing breakfast or working through a problem up-loading music, I know I can be unavailable to my family. I hear their requests for milk or queries about dinner plans but I am unable to break myself away from my focus to respond. It’s an ugly quality, but a classic one for an introvert. I want to be different. (more…)

Getting into Lying-In

Tuesday, January 9th, 2007

Fifteen days of blissful gazing into the eyes of your newborn, resting, nursing and finding that Zen Momma place reads like an idyllic start to a new life together. But who can actually stay in bed for 15 days?? You’ve got new grandparents clamouring at the door, a bundle of joy to show off and your brain is accustomed to multi-tasking 16 things. Lying-in is not for you, right? Don’t write it off so quickly. (more…)

When becoming is the gift

Monday, December 18th, 2006

I’ve got the kind of focus you want in an emergency: clear thought, process orientation and endurance. Those skills and that laser sharp focus come into play when I’m called upon to deal with a sick child or wedge a car out of a scrape (both of which I had to do last week). But that kind of thinking also comes to mind for me when I recall the first weeks with my babes. (more…)