Loggy Bear holding cookies he made for Santa, Christmas 2012 |
"Hi, my name is Joanie and I am addicted to guilt."
Now you say, "Hi Joanie, welcome."First of all, you should know I am a recovering guilt addict. I've tried to ween myself off it's intoxicating pull, but I still get the shakes pretty bad because I crave it like candy; my days filled with sugar highs, and the tell tale signs of impending insulin shock. Maybe I should explain: I am a mother. Enough said? I have three sons, two of whom you might recall have autism, which we agreed is partly due to my DNA (but mostly I like to blame my husband! Blaming him works in almost all aspects of my life). Maybe you don't quite get the picture because you are one of those mothers I secretly despise (not really, because I would have too much anxiety to function if I actually voiced my disappointment in your perfection) whose children are well behaved, who never, say, knock down your ceiling fan with a light saber, or climb the giant pine tree during church until they are so covered in sap you can stick the picture they colored of Jesus right on their shirts, then again, at least it frees up space on the fridge. Yes, you who know you, you queens of order. Curse you! (Sorry I didn't mean it!) I am not one of those women.
I am one of
those women who seems to compel complete strangers in Wal-Mart to ask, “Sugar,
are you all right?” Yes, I recognize my very presence in polite society prompts
kind old ladies, to squeeze my arm encouragingly and say, “Boy, you need all
the help you can get, don't you honey?” To which I want to answer, “Yeah, do
you do windows?” But, truthfully, I'd have guilt over accepting help from an
eighty year old, because what if she accidentally sprayed herself in the eye
with Windex, and blinded by chemicals tripped over the roller skates by the
couch and broke her brittle bones! Then
I'd have a blind lame grandma to worry about. No thanks! Besides, if I could
see out the window, I'd probably see my boys throwing mud at each other, so
I'll just keep my windows the way that they are- covered in finger prints-
thank you very much.
Christmas Eve = Happy Boys! Posing in front of their cookies.
Spencer & Logan, December 2010
Now, don't
get me wrong, I don't share the general public consensus that my boys make me a
menace to society…I love my boys, and it's not like I'm immune to the ways of
testosterone, I grew up with four brothers, which of course means I have been
shot in the butt with a BB gun. And yes, my mother really has said, in our
house, “Jared! Stop shooting your sister!” So, I guess truthfully, it's not
guilt over my son’s behavior that plagues me. But rather, the mother source of
my guilt comes from the tangled root feelings of inadequacy that stretch
throughout my veins. I worry I'm not enough, I don't do enough, I can't be
enough I'm not teaching enough, cleaning enough, loving enough, disciplining
enough, reading enough, playdoughing enough, homeworking enough, stopping
volcanoes from exploding enough, making volcanoes explode enough. I am my own worst critic. Senior citizen’s, Wal-Mart
employees, congregations, teachers and quickie mart cashiers can't think of or
say anything to me or about my children, that I don't already think or say to myself.
Spencer & Logan showing off the snowman cake they made. January 2008 |
And it was in this toxic mind frame of guilt that I found
myself one day in Arizona. I had recently started working part time after a
-six year-have-three-kid-finish-college-hiatus- when Russ returned to school
to get his master's degree. Going back
to work (which consisted of a carefully constructed schedule so my kid's were
never alone, and Russ and I were never together) was causing an enormous oozing
abyss of guilt the likes of which I had never experienced, I seemed to be
dog paddling in all hours. I worked in the evenings, so some nights Russ would
put the kids to bed and I would come home to them already sleeping, (which
normally wouldn't be something that would cause me stress, that emotion would
be labeled: elation) and feel tortured that I hadn't tucked them in.
Spencer the Lizard holding his hastily made birthday cake, July 2009 |
I had balanced school and kids, but as a new working mother I
was learning that some things had to give, there just wasn't enough time to accomplish
all I used to accomplish, but I wasn’t willing to let anything give, which
meant I would stay up until three in the morning making heart shaped sugar
cookies for the Valentine’s Day party. Russ would come out to check on me at
two in the morning and ask, “Couldn't you have just bought a bag of candy?”
which would have been the smart thing to do, but somehow, I couldn't, because
that would have meant some ritual had changed, I wasn't the same as before, and
in my demented mind that would mean my children were paying the price for my
absence. And so, I continued to work, and pile need upon need onto myself
stretching to accommodate everything I thought needed accommodating.
Anyway, on this particular day, in the blaring Arizona heat,
I had just come from the gym, and let me assure you, I am not one of those
girls you see in leotards, that don't even sweat, and have my hair and makeup
perfectly done, just waiting to try out for an excise video at a moment's
notice. First of all the YMCA I went to faced McDonald's so on most days I went
to the gym, I would stare out the window at the golden arches, knowing my forty
five minutes on the treadmill had just bought me five French fries. So,
generally, I'd finish my workout, get Spencer and Logan from the childcare area and I'm
sorry to report, often cross the parking lot to go for a happy meal. Before you
judge me, let’s just all remember they have apple dippers and low fat
milk! As I crossed the street I would
try to block my guilt over going to McDonald's, guilt based solely on the fact
that people were tracking my YMCA progress. No, I'm not just paranoid, because
in case you haven't heard, I am a YMCA poster child. No lies! I was in a YMCA
commercial, (I didn't realize they were filming me or I might have objected) I
think I exemplify the perfect woman they were looking for, the red faced,
sweaty, out of shape house wife, who would inspire people to think...well if
she can do it, then I certainly can. It seemed like everyone was monitoring my
YMCA journey. “The camera adds ten pounds!!” I would rant irrationally when
someone would say, “Hey…. didn’t I see you on TV?”
Me and Logan posing with friends at our anual Polar Express Christmas party, Jackson, WY 2010 |
Logan turns five; his friends help him hold his rocket ship birthday cake I made him, Preston ID, 2007 |
Loggy Bear at the Mother's Day celebration, Jackson Wyoming 2008 |
A child does an interpretive dance, called “Thank you Mother Earth” then there is a drum solo by a five year old rock star, his mother beaming, “He’s been in private lessons since he was two” she confides. Up until this point, I was just glad Logan had stopped eating paste, his perfect ordinariness was endearing, I pulled him closer, dipped my head to smell his soft hair, then, finally, it was Logan's turn to pick what he wanted to drum for his mom, I was hoping for something like, “My soul offers thanks for life, oh great and wise mother, nurturer of my being” What I got was, “Uh..., Thanks for the cookies!” And I just know some mother behind me wants to know if those are organic cookies we are thankful for. The therapist divides us into two groups, she hops from foot to foot, she sways to the drumming, and I can see her belly button ring each time she stretches. She directs the first group, “Thanks for the cookies” “drum, drum drum drum drum.” Logan and I hit our drums. The next groups starts in “Thanks for the cookies, drum drum drum drum drum,” Logan uses his drum sticks on my drum, he smiles his crooked smile, his dimples deep in his cheeks, so pleased to be six, so pleased to be leaning against me, so pleased that I make him cookies, and that he remembered to say thank you. It's another good day. And no, they weren't organic. And yes, I will check my schedule to see if I can squeeze drumming therapy in on Thursday.
Alex, Spencer & Logan made me this heart pizza for Valentine's day 2011 |
Loggy Bear (aka bat-a-man) turns 6! Celebrating with friends, Jackson 2008 |
My friend was telling me, that after planning the trip of a I've lifetime at Disneyland for her girls, including breakfast with Belle, that when she asked her daughter what her favorite part of the vacation was, she answered, “Swimming in the hotel pool.” I'm sure Carrie thought she could have just saved herself three thousand dollars and checked into the Motel 8, six blocks from her house. I guess in the end, what I think I've learned from being a mother, is it's okay to cut some corners, to not be it all, have it all, want it all. My children don't remember me for all the things I've not accomplished, (except for maybe the laundry) my children remember me for my presence, love me for the ways I show them I love them, for the times I have held them, pulled them from the brink of despair over an argument with a friend, brushed their knees free of gravel after a particularly bad bike crash, given them popsicles for their sore throats, and made spy costumes for Halloween. My boys are grateful for ramen noodles, help studying for spelling tests, stories about Captain Underpants, a walk by a river, a push on the swing, and even sometimes for telling them “No. You can't go. I want you here with me.” They've come to expect that I expect something from them. And yes, I am, apparently remembered for cookies. For all those magical Sunday afternoons, (I miss those days when my boys crowded the counter top for a chance to crack an egg, or hold the mixer, or dump the bag of chocolate chips into the metal bowl). I am remembered for warm sweet morsels that slightly burned their little fingers and soft lips, because they're too impatient to wait for them to cool. I am loved for the times I've left the crumbs and chocolate smears pooled against their smiles, for their pink tongues to find later. After all of the guilt, after all of the worrying, I am remembered for cookies, but most importantly, I am remembered.
After opeing this present Logan said, "Santa must have really loved my cookies!" 2010 |