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Of
the many things that I have been taught by life, none are more
important than this:
IT'S NOT ABOUT ME.
As kids we think it's all about
us. This one is looking at me funny because of my shirt. That
one hates me because I got a better grade: I know because she
didn't laugh when I told that joke. Everyone knows I have my period.
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I saw a woman where my mother used to be. |
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Mom's nervous because I was late last time
and because she doesn't trust me. Dad's in a bad mood because
I didn't do that job right. My little brother's crying because
Mom yelled because I made her upset. My family hates me.
For a long time, the world is not our oyster
-- it's our satellite. This becomes truer and truer for kids as
they become teens. This plugged-into-everything feeling intensifies
until adulthood, when healthy people wake up one day one thousand
pounds lighter and suddenly unplugged.
Then you realize that no one cares if you
come to the coffee shop with wet hair and no one sees the black
smudge on the bottom of your pants. Everyone has better things
to think about, like the black smudge on their own pants.
I wish I could now go back and re-live
life in my parents' house with this knowledge tucked behind my
ear, so I could smoke it when my mother looked upset. I'd know
to ask her what was wrong, to show her some empathy, instead of
mowing her down with a malevolent glare and asking her why she
always had to make a big deal of how I dressed.
Thanks for asking, she might say; I'm having
real second thoughts about my career. Who knew she thought twice
about anything? Who knew she wasn't surer than God and always
thinking about me? I didn't. But I never asked.
In fact, my mom changed her career path
radically at least three times during my childhood. She accumulated
two master's degrees and another advanced degree on the way. In
retrospect, I see that she was finding herself, and insatiably
curious about lots of things. But I never asked her about any
of the things she could have told me so much about.
I never asked about a lot of things. If
I saw her crying, I was angry. Why did she have to be so melodramatic,
so attention seeking? Why did she have to guilt me? It never occurred
to me that something might really be wrong in her life, outside
of me. Never occurred to me she had one, outside of me.
It would have been easier for me, not being
in the spotlight, in the hot seat, in focus. In fact, I was not.
It would have been easier for everyone.
I always managed to put my finger inside
my mother's cracks and wedge them right open. If she was uneasy,
I'd make sure she'd stay that way for the rest of the day. How
dare she be uneasy about me? I was uneasy about me. Who knew she
was uneasy about her? Who knew she was struggling with
her own demons? I didn't. But I never asked.
Instead, I punished her for having doubts,
for having flaws, flaws which interfered with my well-being. I
wanted her to get it together and get off my case, but I shoved
myself down her throat at every opportunity. Go away, I would
say, but it's all me and don't you forget it.
I was angry at her for everything she did.
To me. I picked her apart, cell by cell, because I was
so sure she was trying to frustrate me, upstage me, re-shape me.
Something me.
Nothing her.
The day the world stopped revolving around
me, I took a look around to see the amazing view. A woman I am
just getting to know.
And I saw a woman where my mother used
to be.
A woman, like me, who is constantly changing
and growing and learning to laugh at herself.
And now I am, in the words of yesterday's
me, totally wierded out.
Because now I know that she's uneasy around
lots of people, shy. I thought she hated my friends. I thought
she related to her own peers funny, too. It mortified me. Turns
out, it mortified her more. With my outgoing nature, I could have
made it easier for her. But I worked hard to make it unbearable.
Now I know that she grew up in a frigid,
choking, antiseptic environment, from which she herself was a
refugee. I thought she was just scared I'd be too wild, too raw,
that I'd embarrass her. I felt gagged and tied. How could I know
that my burgeoning maturity was taking her to uncharted territory?
How could I know that to her family, SHE was wild? It never
occurred to me that she was uncomfortable and perhaps ill at ease,
rather than pedantic and uptight. It never occurred to me how
far she had already come.
Now I know how it feels to be terrified
of letting your kids do dangerous things. Especially after losing
a baby -- an experience that my mother and I both endured. I thought
she was just overprotective and unreasonable and that she didn't
trust me. Now I know how she suffered each time I got into a car
with that well-packaged irresponsibility I was dating.
In other words, I'm finding that my mother's
flaws were human, rather than inhumane. That they were not only
"not about me", but about things well beyond my pale
of understanding.
I'm finding that this brings me tremendous
relief, and also some pangs of regret. I wasted a lot of time
being angry about things that had nothing to do with me. Wasted
lots of energy looking for ways to get out of her grip, to get
free.
How funny I find it now, that it was me
gripping her all along.
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