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I worked part-time until my oldest
was 12. I was there every morning and afternoon. I found it tough
going. I don't know any mother who doesn't.
The need for food, comfort, talk,
activity.
When they were little, I made up
games where they ran into me and I pushed them down with a pillow.
They loved it.
They kept running back.
I would hum Kachatorian's the Hungarian
Sword Dance. I'd sing and let them spin.
I came up with activities I never
knew existed. Playing with tampons, playing with spoons.
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| Love is a
struggle: A constant challenge to remain calm, patient, available,
kind, firm, and gentle. |
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I spent
half the day giving out food and the other half cleaning up. The
washing machine was thumping --the phone was ringing-the kids
were painting the table-the dishwasher was humming, the baby was
burping, the dog was barking, the blender was blending. In short,
sheer pandemonium.
It was tough. I was tired. But I
was there. From cockcrow to last bath.
Now my kids are a bit older. I work
full time. When I speak to my children after they return from
school, it's on the telephone. I talk them through making pizza
in the microwave, urge them to after school activities, and encourage
dog walking. I negotiate sibling disputes.
I drink a coffee. I look at the pictures
of my kids on my desk. I'm a great mother. I never ever yell.
I am calm, relaxed and authoritative.
In short, I'm a different person.
Telephone mom!
At the end of almost every phone call I tell them I love them.
But real life is something different.
Real life is much more complicated. Real life teaches you. Real
like can't be reduced to a four letter word like love.
At home I'm not always telling them
I love them.
At home, I'm living it.
And living it is not always pleasant.
Living it is children painting a
salt concoction on the newly upholstered chair,
Kids fighting over wearing each other's
socks,
And the dog eating the couch.
All of it there for the taking-and
the leaving.
Love is a struggle: A constant challenge
to remain calm, patient, available, kind, firm, and gentle.
If only I could parent long distance,
life would be much easier.
But parenting is not a long distance
proposition.
Just like a writer is somebody who
writes, not somebody who talks about writing, a parent is somebody
who parents. And real parenting doesn't happen over the phone
wires, any more than real sex does.
Parenting happens at home. Where
I am not the perfect mother. Where I am not a disembodied voice
on the phone. Where I am human: fallible, tired, grouchy, and
loving. Where the best and the worst and the in-between vie to
be champions of my day-and of my children's days.
Still the mommying gets done. Like
when you don't eat during the day, you end up eating all night.
Children demand their fair share of parenting. When I can't give
enough to my children during the day, I have to make up for it
at night. Which means no down time for me. Which means that I
do all my mommying on the second shift. Which means homework,
baths, emotional nurturing, physical comforting, cuddling, fighting,
and crying at night.
Even when their father is home, they
wait for me. They need mommy to decompress, to download, to pour
out their little hearts to.
Only real mommy will do.
Because parenting is being with children.
And we parents need our children
to teach us
Being.
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