Saturday, November 12, 2016

If I'm Doing Okay, Why Am I Trying So Hard?

[This was written years ago when my children were young]



When the baby eats the dog's food, my first thought is, "If I were a good mother, this would never happen!" When I realize I have forgotten my daughter's fourth grade class concert, I think, "A good mother remembers things like that." Many times a day the "If I were a good mother...." refrain plays in my mind and I feel inadequate and frustrated as a mother.

If I were a good mother. . . .  
I would know instinctively what to do,
From the day they take their first breath
To the day they take their marriage vows...
And beyond!


          I don't remember my mother agonizing about motherhood. She didn't read Dr. Spock, child development manuals, or take parenting (or even Lamaze) classes. Yet she seemed secure and confident in her identity as A MOTHER! She just assumed that she would know what to do and she did. I recall her saying that the most important thing about parenting was loving your children and enjoying them, and everything else would fall into place. She also said that knowing how to be a good mother was instinctive and that when I had children I would automatically know what to do.

          I didn't! I worried and fussed from the first minute, armed not only with my sister's child development manual, but the most popular Baby and Child Care book I could find. I recall the overwhelming inadequacy that hit me as I looked down on my new firstborn and thought, "What on earth made me think I would know how to take care this?" Is such an awesome feeling of responsibility for another life normal or even common? Years later, I still worry that maybe I'm not doing my best and I'll pay for it with delinquent, drug-crazed, undernourished, unhappy, unloving or, heaven forbid, maladjusted children?

If I were a good mother
I'd always know where my kids are at l0:00 p.m.!
And before--not after--I hear a crash,
Or blood-curdling screams.


          Did television give me unrealistic expectations? I grew up with Claire Huxtable and Carol Brady of the Brady Bunch as my examples. Did it brainwash me into believing in an ideal mother, who always solved the problems of her children with a smile and in less than half an hour. Am I trying to live up to the mother in the TV ads who always has home-baked cookies warm from the oven for her children along with the perfect retort! Television not only gave me examples of "perfect" mothers, it also countered by showing me, every night on the 5:00 news, all the things that could go wrong if I failed as a mother: the delinquency, drug abuse, murders, gang wars, mental illness, kidnappings. And it instilled a feeling of guilt as it declaimed sententiously, "It's l0:00 p.m. Do you know where your children are?" even when they were in bed asleep.

If I were a good mother...
My home would always be spotlessly clean
With floors you could eat off and
Plates you can see yourselves in.

          Did commercials that sang of shining floors and shinier plates convince me that cleanliness was the embodiment of motherhood? Did it depict "mother love" as smiling when the baby threw the cereal on the floor or the dog tramped mud in on the new carpet? Did sitcoms that never showed clutter make me feel uneasy if my daughter cut out in the living room? When I bought a toy that wasn't "educational" or the latest fad, did I feel I was depriving my children? If they weren't computer whizzes, was it a reflection on me? Did it subconsciously (or consciously) influence me that love is giving your child all the toys, computer games or designer jeans he sees on TV? Or giving him only the "right cereal?

If I were a good mother...
I'd buy only organic food,
Serve only low-calorie, fat-free, high fiber
Peanut butter snacks carved in animal shapes!

           Was my generation the first to feel that there was a "better" way to do things? We wanted organic food, nutritious snacks, low-cholesterol breakfasts, sushi, Quinoa, tofu and bean sprouts. But our children still became junk-food junkies! Did we feel that if we bought the "right" food, they'd avoid all the obesity, heart-attacks and cancers that have plagued the earth for generations? Did we feel that supervised exercise and fun activities would make our children thinner and happier than we'd been?

           I must have subconsciously felt that my parent's generation must have been ineffective or our world wouldn't be in the mess it was in. I wasn't the only one I'm sure that wanted to show we could do a better job doing things "our way", but not even child psychology books could agree what the "best" way was. There has been free love, more welfare, living together, more "friendly" divorces, more single parents and same gender families, but has our generation done better than our parent's generation? We wanted to save the world with peace on earth and universal love, but our children are still unhappy, faced with greater problems, not only physical but sexual abuse, different wars, more dangerous drugs, expanded crime, increased poverty and homelessness, not to mention plagues like AIDS, than our own generation!

If I were a good mother...
I would help my kids with the "new" math,
So they'd become the class valedictorians
Or Olympic champions and make me proud!

          Do I try to live vicariously through my children? Because I was a full-time mother do I equate success or failure by my children's achievements? Or when I work outside the home, do I rationalize that I am giving my children more responsibility and opportunities to garner awards? Do I claim my children's honors are bonuses earned partly by me? How responsible am I for my children's successes or failures? I recall the tongue-in-cheek song, "Officer Krumpke" from West Side Story where delinquency is attributed to failure of the parents, the schools, society and the child itself. Just as the song comes full circle in putting blame for personal problems on everyone and no one, we can't pin down absolutely why children fail or succeed. We try as parents to do our best, but more often than not we succeed or fail in spite of ourselves. I am too apt to take credit for my children's successes and blame their failures on anything or anyone else. And is that fair to them or me?

If I were a good mother...
I'd be my child's best friend
And we'd have meaningful "raps"
In our quality time together!


          Was my generation too idealistic?  The disillusionment when I realized I was not an ideal parent made me feel not just inadequate but a failure. I was not a "good" mother, whatever that meant! My mother on the other hand never expected to be the perfect mother; but she felt she was a good mother. Would I worry less about how good a mother I was if my own mother could have shared her insight and failures with me as I raised my children? Do I see her as a more "perfect" mother that I can't live up to because she died before I made her a grandmother? Because I can't recall the times she yelled at me and got angry do I worry when I lose my cool? Was she more like me than I realize?

If I were really a good mother....
I would realize the raising a child
Is not always easy, but it's worthwhile.
The rewards are not always tangible,
But the most important thing is to keep trying.


          I felt the same overwhelming awe and fear with my fifth baby twenty years later as I did with my first when I was young and fearless! "Now that I know how impossible it is to be a good mother, why do I think I will succeed as mother this time?" To the awe and inadequacy I had felt many years ago when my oldest was born, was added the knowledge and sad experiences of the intervening years when my youngest was laid in my arms. I know now what I only suspected years before-- that raising a child is the most challenging and difficult job on the earth today! And that no time, or person is perfect.

          My mother once told me that she realized she was pregnant with my brother on the day the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor. She was saddened to think that this new babe inside her might only serve as fodder in some war to secure peace in the world. The day that the my pregnancy test came back positive with my youngest child, I looked at the world and wondered if things could get worse. There were still wars, poverty, crime and pollution. I wondered what dangers my unborn child would face in this imperfect world. I am aware of the dangers that lurk hidden within each new day-- accidents, illnesses, failures, arguments, disappointments, wars, sociological perils, plagues, radiations, global warming and air pollution. But I also know the joys and delights, the revelry, the accomplishments, companionship, fun and excitement that lie behind each new day also.

          I laugh when I recall how I woke up my first baby continually to see if he was wet! I was so naive and innocent then! Now I don't worry if I will know what to do, but if I will have the energy to do it! And I realize how different and unique each child is and I know I can't treat them the same or expect them to react even similarly.

          There are many days when I feel very inadequate and a veritable failure as a mother; when I am late picking up my son from soccer or too busy to notice my daughter is unhappy. On those days, my "If I were a good mother" inner tape plays repeatedly and I feel like declaring maternal bankruptcy. But there are far more days when I feel good about how I'm doing as a mother and pat myself on the back. It may be something as simple as taking the baby to the park or fixing a special picnic supper that brings a glow to my heart. Or it may be that we survived a family dinner without a disaster or phone call!


          On those good days, I realize that I worry about how I'm doing as a mother because it is so important! I recall my mother's long-ago words that it's the loving and the enjoyment that counts and her advice to never quit trying! And so, although motherhood may not be instinctive and I'm far from perfect, I begin each new day vowing to be a not just a "good" mother (if there is such a mythical creature) but only a better mother than I was the day before.


          I try to learn from my errors and keep my head above water as I travel along the bumpy road of motherhood. But the scenery is always different and the road is filled with fun and excitement as we go along! And motherhood is one venture where the destination is only one part of the journey!

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