
“Making the decision to have a child is momentous. It is to decide forever to have your heart go walking around outside your body.” – Elizabeth Stone
“You are my sun, my moon, and all my stars” – E.E. Cummings
Author’s Note:
The decision to become a mother and the experience of being a mother is highly individual and personal. My thoughts on the matter are based solely on my own experience of being mothered, becoming a mother myself, and a recent discussion with my adult children about the pros and cons of choosing to become a mother (parent). The following essay is an opinion piece, not intended to critique or explore anyone’s choice or experience but my own. It is part love letter, and part cautionary tale, as written by a little old lady…in waiting, the mother of two twenty somethings who recently asked, incredulously, “If you got to do it all over again, would you still choose to become a mother?”
This post is dedicated to everyone who has ever asked themselves if motherhood was for them and, however they answer, a celebration of the right to choose and define that role on their own terms. There are many ways to mother, and we need not be corseted by traditional paradigms. As every mother knows, there is a bottomless well of love inside to bestow on all those whom we choose to call our own.
A few months back I was walking into a glass fronted store when I caught my reflection in the entrance. It was my mother’s face that stared back at me, and not my own. It shocked me at first, and then a feeling of such unexpected happiness and peace came over me, as though she was there with me for a moment, and covertly always close by, watching over me, even when she “walks invisible”. My mother passed away suddenly almost ten years ago now, a massive hemorrhagic stroke at the age of 82. She was old, I guess, but I didn’t know it. She had survived breast cancer and open-heart surgery and she was very much alive and present in my life, my companion most days, and my first and closest friend always. There are days when I miss her so badly, I surrender to the emotion, I crumple, and after a time I rise and try to remember everything she taught me about life, including how to be a mom.
My mother, like so many women of her generation, stayed at home with us when we were growing up, and her constant companionship and attention informed our understanding of our worth. Surely, we must be important if we could command so much of her time. In those early years our family did not have much in the way of material wealth, but I was blissfully unaware. I felt like a princess because that’s what I saw in my mother’s eyes when she looked at me. She didn’t work outside our home, so our humble abode was spotless. There was always a home cooked meal for dinner, and most days a cookie as big as your head when I got home from school. And so beget a lifelong addiction to sweets … but that’s another post. It’s always the mother’s fault.
My mother took her work seriously. She saw her role as the keeper of the home and the keeper of our hearts. She never cared if we earned good grades, or made AAA sports teams, but she was hard core when it came to the inner workings of our moral compass. She was always our True North and is largely responsible for what I have come to refer to as a strong Catholic sense of guilt. We were just as rotten as other kids, of course, but Mom made sure we learned how to feel bad about it afterwards. She was a master class in empathy and a maker of men who will, 9 times out of 10…perhaps with a little prompting, attempt to do the right thing…if convenient, especially with the promise of a sugary treat for good behavior. And I guess if we’re talking world peace and the survival of the planet and, you know,…the human race, there can surely be no more important work, no higher goal than making sure the next generation feels a bit bad about not being good.
My own daughter, aged 24, has a slightly different take on the whole mothering concept. She recently returned home from her first peer group baby shower with a serious case of “ick”. Although she was happy for her friend, near bursting with an almost fully baked baby, she was a little disgusted by the idea of body sharing with what she currently considers a kind of parasite, and as a qualified nurse she is more than a little horrified by the idea of the coming out party. It doesn’t take Psych 101 to understand in my small, Catholic guilted heart, that as her mother, I must be to blame. Did I overshare when I recounted her own birth story, that in the absence of an epidural, if I could have gotten off the birthing gurney and thrown myself out the window, I would have. Too much? I mean it was still one of the best days of my life…right? I didn’t have the heart to tell her that pregnancy, labour and delivery are the easy parts.
The truth is that I felt very much the same about becoming a mom when I was in my 20’s. I’m still not sure what happened to make me change my mind: falling in love, the biological imperative, socialization, FOMO. I don’t know how it happened… well, I mean, I know how it happened …I’m just not sure exactly when or how the idea first came for me. I only know that when it came it was a complete knowing, not some indifferent or half-hearted decision.
“Would I do it again,” they asked me, would I choose to become a mother knowing all that I know now about the sacrifices, the highs and lows, the weight of the responsibility and the constancy of the relationship? Of course, I told them what every mother must, that knowing and loving them as I do, I could never choose differently. But a little later that same evening I gave their question a more rigorous and honest consideration. I thought about what I had willingly given up or done without to accommodate the mother role.
I spent 12 years at home with my kids in their formative years. I had never mentally prepared myself for that kind of mothering, I had my mom set up to be the 9 to 5 Nanny, but after her heart attack, it became clear that I had just landed a full-time position well above my aptitude test. Let’s just say I wasn’t a natural. I had never really learned to play, I had the patience of a gnat, I hated crafting, and organized sport remains a mystery to me to this day. I had only the vaguest understanding of toddler milestones. Looking back on those challenging years I will admit it wasn’t all idyllic or Instagramable. Being a mother is, without a doubt, the hardest job I’ve ever had. It’s a learn-as-you- go deal with no gentle onboarding. The hours are unacceptable, the pay is shite, and the performance reviews can be eviscerating.
The pragmatics of mothering, the meal prep and lunch bags, the homework, the chauffeuring and learning to tolerate the child centred activities: the birthday parties, the bowling alleys, the soccer fields and hockey arenas… all of that can be managed. For me, by far the hardest part of being a mother is that you’re “only ever as happy as your unhappiest child.” The scraped knees and fevers, the broken hearts, the car accidents, and the plethora of little wounds that befall our children are far more agonizing than anything we could experience ourselves. The mother bond is like a Chinese finger trap and cuts deep when tested.
Despite all the hard graft of mothering, the blessings…the gifts far outweigh the grievances. I am not the person I was before I became a mother. My children changed me. Mother love is the fiercest, most intense, highest frequency, unconditional love that we can experience. No one… no one will ever love you like your mother does. Motherhood is a transformative experience. It taught me humility and patience, it showed me how little we can control and how much we have to be grateful for every day we get to spend together. Even as adults my kids continue to help me grow with their contemporary take on what constitutes a life well lived and their insights on how we should best spend our time. To be clear, I am in no way suggesting that cohabitating with twenty somethings is easy. It is not. But the Zoomer zeitgeist does keep things interesting.
In short, being a mother, in my experience, is both the best of times and the worst of times. Would I choose to become a mother again, with the perspective of time, and the convenient memory of a woman well past the heavy-lifting years of mothering – an emphatic, “yes.” Adding up all the mom hours I have logged over a lifetime, do I sometimes wonder what I might have accomplished had I spent that time in pursuit of projects more in keeping with my natural inclinations – again “Yes.” Do I crave a more serene environment with less shoes at the door, fewer dishes in the sink, with more time to read and walk and wonder, without consideration of anyone’s needs but my own? “Perhaps.” Do I sometimes fantasize about an alternate life where I am a lady of leisure and letters, in Rembrandt-lit rooms filled with books, reclining in a Chaise-lounge overlooking the sea… CBC radio my only company? Of course, I have…Moms are human beings too you know. Did I live up to the bar my own mother set? Did I do my job well? Am I the True North that will help guide my children in making decisions that align with their values and beliefs when it is my time to “walk invisible?” I hope so. All I know for sure is that I would rather be a merely adequate or average mother to my two darling descendants than an excellent anything else.
If you’re still searching for the perfect gift for Mother’s Day, take some advice from a little old lady in waiting – make dinner, wash the dishes, clean the house, do the laundry, and if you still live at home, maybe take yourself out for the day. Give your Mom some time to herself, time to remember the woman she was before you owned her entire heart, in the days before your chapters of her story, when she belonged only to herself.
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