Stomping around

It has been a difficult parenting week for me. Grace and I have been at each other’s throats, each crying on and off and yelling at each other. I have thought for ages about this old topic, mothers and daughters, since my college thesis. My 21 year old self surely thought my 35 year old self would have it figured out better by now. More control over her reactions, more maturity (ah how many realms of life that is true for, not just parenting my daughter!) Despite all of my thinking and all of my efforts I still don’t have answers as to how best to navigate the eddies and slipstreams of this particular river.

But one of my favorite bloggers has sage words today that, while not providing solutions, reassure me that I’m not alone. (Jenn of Breed ‘Em and Weep). This is not the first of her columns that has spoken to me like this. I am so grateful for writers out there whose words console, comfort, and create community. I know so profoundly the feeling of screwing up, sometimes spectacularly, and then of picking myself up and trying again. Thank you Jenn! Please keep sharing your journey – I am learning much from you.

“Today was a hard day for Sophie. Today was a hard day for me and for Sophie, together.

She raged. She pouted. She stomped. She ran. She howled.

I raged. I growled. I yelled. I chased. I threatened.

This is the way.

*****

In the end, as we usually do, we wind up sitting on her bed, working it out. It is never easy. We lurch, she and I. We interrupt each other. We raise our voices, and hiss at each other in blame—always! The blame! Bouncing off pink walls!

But: I have been a daughter before; she has not. I know that mothers and daughters, even the most loving, hiss more than snakes. There is always hissing, posturing, growling. It’s an animal relationship. The first step to surviving it is to entering the deal knowing there will be battles. This is how I see it.

Sophie is still deciding how to see it, this mother-daughter relationship of ours. I hate that occasionally it must come to this, but somehow, I am sure it must. There is something to this cycle of love-hate-love-hate-love that makes me sure I am doing something right.

I tell her I am sorry we had one of our rough days, but that it’s my job to teach her responsibility, to show her that the sun does not revolve around her and the moon will not pick up her laundry.

I tell her it is my job, as her mother, to teach her rules and limits, and to expect—no, demand—more of her, when it comes to her role as citizen of the world….

At bedtime, I smush my face against her cheek in an exaggerated mushy kiss. I freeze like this. She first ignores me, then sets her book down.

“You’re giving me a bruise,” she says, rolling her eyes.

“I’m giving you love. So you can’t miss it. So you can’t say your mother didn’t love you.”

Grudgingly, she smiles.

I like to think that I am giving her a safe place to duke it out. I like to think that our squawking has a purpose. That our fighting teaches her that love can endure fighting, a good scrap now and then.

So I will take grudging smiles, the eye rolls, the heavy sighs, the “everybody elses” and the “nobody elses” that plague her already ruined existence (if you listen to her).

I can take grudging. I can bear grudging, if the conclusion—eventually—is a grudging, “My mom was nuts, but she loved me. She does love me.” I don’t know that that is what the conclusion will be, but my gut tells me—in spite of everything, the “other things” of which my father spoke—my gut still tells me that something of my intuition, my instinct, has remained intact.

So I wait. I watch. I holler my head off. I am mother. Hear me roar, then hear me soothe. Watch me screw up, marvelously. Then watch me try, try, always try, to make it better.

Take it from the top, Maestro Mama. Again. Again. Again.”

Drizzly Wednesday, June 24

Grace regaled me this morning with tales of her new summer camp (while modeling my shoes). She is most excited by the fact that they have computers at camp. And photography. She told me all about the cafeteria, and about how this summer (unlike the last 2, at the same camp) she actually lines up with her tray and goes through the cafeteria line. She told me about how she has her very own locker for swimming, and that they swim twice a day in the temporary above-ground pools that have been set up inside, on the hockey rink. Once, she said, “for strokes and stuff.” And the other time, “For free swim. That’s the fun one.”

Visions of her playing Marco Polo dance through my head. I remember being this age at summer camp, and the damp coldness of tugging on an already-wet bathing suit for another swimming lesson. I love this camp. As far as I can tell it’s a close approximation of a city high school experience. And Grace is delighted with it.

Whit woke me up at 7:05 when he climbed into bed with her. He giggled while he told me all about dinner with Nana last night. He talked about the roast chicken that she had brought over, with oy-ebs (took me a while to figure out this was herbs). This vegetable and fruit fearing child was so proud of himself for eating the green specks of oyebs, you’d think he had devoured a spinach and kale salad. “And, guess what, Mummy!?” he said, a piece-de-resistance sparkle in his eye, “There was a lemon in the chicken. Stuffed up its bottom!!!”

This afternoon I took Whit to swimming. In the drizzle. We were early, of course, and he was cheerful as he cantered around the pool waiting his turn, tugging up his swimming trunks that are too big and kept falling down, his skim-milk white skin (so much like mine) fairly glowing in the gloom.

Still, he remains resolutely unbuoyant. He sinks like a stone. I wonder if it’s his utter lack of body fat? He loves the water and spends his 30 minutes with his hands clasped around the neck of his college student teacher, laughing and having a ball. But float? Let go? No. At the end of the lesson, Chris, Whit’s teacher, was trying to get him to do a sitting down dive. It looks like he’s about to. But then he just dropped his hands, scooted off his butt into the water, and threw himself into Chris’s arms again.

Grace

Yesterday, Gracie and I both rode segways for the first time. Very cool. It boggles my mind to remember the over-heated press the segway received when it was invented: the item that will revolutionize modern life! The single most important invention of this century! I don’t agree with that. But they were fun to ride. And Grace got the hang of it very fast.

She’s had a rough week, my girl. She has been tired and for some reason unable to recoup her sleep. She’s been wired and whiny, exhausted and explosive. She has been rigid and unable to bounce back when something doesn’t go her way (any of this sound familiar?).

Today was a tough day. She was difficult during the drive home from NH, and then a trip to Bread & Circus was full of whining and complaining and heel-dragging. We got home and she was, in her nails-on-chalkboard way, expressing her displeasure about something (I don’t even remember what) when I snapped at her, loudly. She looked at me in surprise and immediately burst into tears. She ran upstairs and, in a few minutes, surprised me by being able to turn it around.

She came downstairs and cheerfully helped me make dinner, set the table, put away clean napkins, etc. She was frankly a delight for about 45 minutes. Then, after dinner, she wanted to blow out a candle (that she had dipped yesterday at Clark’s Trading Post). She blew it out and wanted to make a wish but Whit started talking and she started crying that she could not concentrate on her wish when someone was talking. I relit the candle and we tried again, two more times.

Finally, with Grace in floods of tears about her inability to make her wish, I blew my top and started full-on yelling at her. I sent her upstairs crying and cleaned up the kitchen, feeling miserable and guilty. She went straight to bed at 6:20 but spent at least 45 minutes on and off screaming/wailing/crying in her room. I went in several times trying to calm her down to no avail. She wanted the candle up in her room to make her wish again. I said no.

She finally went to sleep but I still feel awful about it. I know that all of the behaviors she exhibited tonight are ones I still demonstrate at 35. I can be inflexible, unable to cope with people not doing what I want, emotional, and hair-triggery. She is acting out behaviors that she inherited from me: they are probably both innate and learned. In both cases, clearly and utterly my fault. And if I am any example, she’s got a lifetime ahead of them.

So I yelled at my child because she aggravated me, but even more because I hate knowing that it is I, and only I, who has given her this baggage to carry. Her inability to cope when the world won’t bend to her will is my responsibility. Oh, what a poor legacy I have given her. I am ashamed at my own immaturity; she was behaving badly but she does not deserve to be yelled at and I ought not take out my own frustration about my weaknesses on her.

Oh, Gracie girl, you deserve so much more than you have in me. I will go into your room tonight and smother you with kisses, and I will sleep with a heavy heart.

Delta shuttle expert

And she’s home!

Walking to the car at Logan:

“Grace, where did you sit in the plane?”

“Well, I was in the second row until the flight attendant moved me to the front row.”

“Oh, I see. I like the front row.”

“Yes, mum. The very front row. She moved me during the part where they show you how to get your mask from the ceiling. You know that part.”

So nonchalant!

She’s now in full-blown, exhaustion, tantrumming mode. But that’s a small price to pay for a trip she’ll remember forever.

Thank you, Hadley, John, Charlotte, and Jack!