Things I'm Thinking About

Year: 2015 (Page 6 of 10)

Mother Worry

From the first day mothers find out we’re pregnant, we worry. Mothering and worrying are synonyms. I’m not talking about curled-up-in the-corner, eyes-glazed-in-fear worrying (though that does happen), I’m talking about a more active worry: The “I Will Keep My Baby safe From Everything” type of worry.

It starts with vigilant pre-natal care, pregnancy books and blogs, birth plan research, and breathing practice. Healthy eating and exercise regimens become a constant quest. When the precious one arrives, we battle through diaper choices, feeding decisions, child care options, and skin care products.

Relentless, life forces us to make schooling selections, extra-curricular and child-care plans and find appropriate social outlets for our little ones. The details and thinking and–yes, worrying–are endless.

Everyday, we either protect and care for our children ourselves, or we carefully select the people who are in their lives as caregivers, teachers, medical professionals and friends. We dress them, feed them, hug them, talk to them, listen to them and make sure they are growing and thriving.

It gets more difficult in the teen years–but we do our best to keep track of them, to help them navigate school work, to go to every game they play, and to drive them and their friends around, eavesdropping just a little to get a sense of what’s going on inside their lives when they aren’t talking to us quite so much.

Then they move out. They go to college, they start working, they are not in your constant, physical care. You have to turn them over to themselves. That old Mother Worry screams, “Wait! I didn’t teach you everything yet! You can barely do your own laundry!”

The Mother Worry is kept in check by the ability to do something about it. For the first 18 years or so, we have a hands-on role in keeping baby safe. Even when they start to exercise their independence, we are there, waiting up for them to come home. We are still feeding, clothing, watching, listening, monitoring. When they aren’t there to see and feel and feed, Mother Worry can take on a life of it’s own.

I feel it now, as I think about it. The clenching in the gut, the what-if’s crowding in with images of all sorts of trouble and pain waiting to pounce on my babies. It is not safe out there. I remember how I felt when I first tip-toed out on my own, unsure of myself. I was lonely. I was a little scared. I wasn’t sure I could do it. I want to be there for my kids to help, to cheer, to protect.

So, I pray. I text. I call. I send care packages. I visit. Many nights, I wake up and can’t sleep, and my kids come to mind, so I pray some more.

There are some hard things that they have to face. There are still bullies out there, and terrible friend choices. There are drugs and parties and bad drivers and bad bosses. One of my precious ones even got lost, barefoot, in a forest after a river floating trip. And I wasn’t there to help. I didn’t even know about it.

That’s when I realize that my Mother Worry, while it helps me to be a persistent, careful parent, is not enough to ensure that my children with grow up to be happy, healthy adults. It never had magic powers to keep all the bad, scary stuff away. There aren’t any guarantees that can be purchased, stolen, earned or even prayed into existence.

Children grow up, learn from their mistakes, and live their own lives. It is truly a wonder to behold. Pride and anticipation start to push down the worry. They have grown into themselves in ways I couldn’t have imagined when I was focused on keeping all the bad stuff away. They are people that I like and admire.

The worry doesn’t go away, but we can manage it by trusting that God is the best at Mother Worry, and is taking care in ways we often can’t see or understand. Then, when the children come home for a visit, we get to baby them again.

Will I Ever Get My Laundry Done?

As I toured the house today, looking for items to fill out my white load in the washer, I remembered those days not so long ago when laundry was a crushing task. It haunted me, dogged me, overwhelmed me.

There used to be a literal mountain of dirty laundry in the basement by the washing machine: clothes from six busy children, linens from a kitchen that cranked out food like a camp chuckwagon, towels and sheets from endless baths, showers, night-time accidents and sick days. The few times someone came home with lice, requiring that every sheet, rug, towel, pillow, blanket and stuffed animal be washed, nearly broke me.

Almost every day, I began with re-washing the wet items in the washer that had taken on a musty smell, and re-heating the items in the dryer that were now a cold, wrinkled mass. Then I could begin processing things through, folding everything hot out of the dryer–if I transferred it to a basket, it would never get folded–and sorting it into stacks for each person or room, and then feeding the washer and dryer with more from the pile.

I used to think that if something happened to me, the biggest problem would be that no one else could possibly know how to sort all the Disney Princess, Lion King, Batman and Superman underwear into the right stacks. I gave up on sorting socks and bought dozens of the same socks. Easy to pair, easy to distribute.

The smaller kids liked to hide in the pile, stifling giggles and waiting for me to come. I would pretend I didn’t see them, and act like I was putting them in the washer. The sorted piles were a mess, but the laughter lightened the load.

When my mother came to visit, she made it her mission to conquer the laundry mountain. She would stay in the basement, doing load after load until she washed every last thing in the pile. It was a challenge to put it all away, since it was so rarely all clean at the same time. By the time she left, I was actually ahead of the dirty clothes–for a day.

Laundry is a stand-out among other tasks–like cooking and cleaning-that feel endless, and defy us to measure progress. They need to be done, but are often repetitive and thankless. If success is measured by how much stuff we get done, surely we must be failing.

My laundry piles have subsided, and I have some breathing room and some perspective. These tasks are not ends in themselves; they are building something bigger, something that will last. All those loads of laundry, together with your other labors for the family, create a place where people are safe and clean and cared for.

Success isn’t  measured by what you get done, but by what you allow to grow, making space and pushing back chaos to make a home.

You Can Always Come Home

The day a child moves away from home is always emotional. It’s exciting to be going to college, a new living space or off on an adventure. It’s a little sad, too, especially for the mama staying behind, to say good-bye to a little nestling as they spread their wings and leave home.

They will be back, I know.  Once they move out, though, they don’t live with us the same way again. When they return, it feels more like a visit. Even if they move back for a longer period, there is a different dynamic. They have lived on their own and don’t want to be treated like a child.

When they leave, I’m not sentimental  about the space they vacated. Either a sibling moves in, claiming the better room, or the room is repurposed, maybe becoming an office or guest room. The rooms and furniture get shuffled around, and personal belongings that don’t go with the one moving out are boxed up and stored in the garage.

This might sound a little harsh, but I’m not trying to kick them out or keep them away–I sometimes wish they could stay here forever. I started doing it this way when the first few moved out, because it was necessary to shift and shuffle in order to use our space better. Now that we’re down to just three in the house, we have a new development: extra room.

It doesn’t stay empty for long, though. Opportunities to share our extra space come up often–friends visiting or in town on business, grandparents coming for a football game or graduation,  aunts and uncles and cousins here for holidays or just passing through–to name a few.

My favorite times are when the house is full with all my babies home, tucked into bed warm and safe, all of us together. I want them to know that no matter how far away they go, this is their home. They always have a place here–it just may not be the same place every time. Sometimes, it might be on the couch.

I hope the love of the family embraces and restores them when they come home, no matter which room they set down their suitcase and nestle into bed.

I Sit and Think

I Sit and Think

I sit beside the fire and think of all that I have seen,
of meadow-flowers and butterflies in summers that have been;
Of yellow leaves and gossamer in autumns that there were,
with morning mist and silver sun and wind upon my hair.
I sit beside the fire and think of how the world will be
when winter comes without a spring that I shall ever see.

For still there are so many things that I have never seen:
in every wood in every spring there is a different green.
I sit beside the fire and think of people long ago,
and people who will see a world that I shall never know.
But all the while I sit and think of times there were before,
I listen for returning feet and voices at the door.

–JRR Tolkien

I found this poem in The Lord of the Rings and loved it. It made me think of my almost-empty nest, how much of life is now in my memory, of the seasons to come that I will not be around for, but mostly, how I look so forward to hearing those returning feet and voices at my door. It makes me tear up every time I think about it.

It’s a cozy scene, Bilbo tucked in by the fire with a cup of tea, remembering and dreaming. For me, it’s also proven to be a brief scene. Just about the time I get settled in to reminisce and be melancholy, those footsteps and voices do return, and I’m pulled into the present.

Sometimes it’s scheduled in advance. As the summer winds down, one of my girls likes to come home and harvest apples from the little apple trees in our yard and make applesauce to put up in jars. We planned another day to make jars of salsa while there are still tomatoes and peppers at the farmer’s market . As my canning shelf begins to fill up, I’m thankful for her energy that encourages me to do things I love to do, but would become just sweet memories by the fire if we didn’t do them together.

Other times, it’s unexpected. A few times in recent weeks, I’ve gotten a text from one of my kids that says something like, “Are you doing anything right now?” Usually I am doing something–whether cozied up with memories or a more workaday task–but since much of my work is flexible,  I often can say, “Not really, why?”

Last week, a daughter needed help to buy a bed, mattress and linens from IKEA, drive it all to San Francisco, push/pull/carry it up to her third floor apartment, and build it. As the the head board came  together, we were proud of ourselves until we came to a critical point and realized we had switched two pieces (“Oh that’s what the A and B on the bottom of the legs means!”). We hit another snag when the center beam was not included in the bed box, which extended the project into the next afternoon. Finally finished, we sagged, sore and happy, onto her lovely new bed.

The week before that, one of my girls was inspired by the crisp fall air to bake–at my house. She came over and we spent the afternoon making pumpkin bread and pumpkin-shaped sugar cookies with orange frosting. She left the next day, her bag loaded with fall goodies to share with her roommate and friends.

I’m snuggled up with my laptop now, relishing these sweet new memories and waiting for the next footsteps and voices at the door.

Game Day

“You went to UC Berkeley? But you’re so normal!” Living in Colorado, this was the kind of response we got to our Alma Mater. Berkeley, apparently, has a reputation that doesn’t translate well into midwestern Suburbia.

When we moved back to California in 2003, our Cal school spirit was awakened and we started going as a family to watch Golden Bears football on Saturday. Being back on campus made Steve and I feel like kids again, and all our children loved the excitement. It was one of the few things that everyone in the family–from second grade to high school–loved to do.

Whether is was the new Cal gear from the student store, the intriguing older students, the fun of the traditions, the stadium hot dogs, soda and cotton candy, or the game itself, everyone enjoyed our days packed into the wooden seats of the family section at Memorial Stadium.

Every fall since then–with the exception of the year we couldn’t bear to watch loss after humiliating loss–has been shaped by Cal’s home-game schedule. The number of season tickets has  dwindled, though, as kids graduate and leave home, and the smaller the group gets, the stronger the pull of other activities becomes. We have three tickets this year, with only one kid living at  home, but we often have an extra ticket when that lonely-only decides he has more options than just cheering with Mom and Dad.

There’s a momentum to family events that shifts with the numbers of participants, and is complicated by the ebbing influence parents have on their children’s lives. Our gravitational pull was strong when they were young; we were the center of their world. As friends, studies, jobs, sports, and romance  begin to catch and  hold their attention, we become one of many voices tugging at their time and attention.

There seems to be acceleration, too–the first kids were slow to disengage, siblings providing a little more family stickiness. When the fifth child spun off to pursue his own interests, he seemed to loosen our pull on the  youngest as well. Somehow the idea of family time changed for our baby when it became Mom and Dad focusing on him alone.

It’s game day today, and our youngest is using his ticket–along with an additional one for his girlfriend. We do what we can to keep our place in his world.

Go Bears!

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