Tuesday, December 19, 2017

Well, our little granddaughter is going to be three months old on December 31, and our grandson Wyatt will be nearly two and a half. She's getting more and more personality, smiling a lot and laughing. He is very articulate and verbal and seems to be aware of what he's saying, in fact he "practices" what he says by repeating it as if he wants to be sure he has it solidly in his mind and repitoir of expressions. His world, to me, is just grand. Every day he gets to do something he likes. Mindy (his babysitter) takes him to the park or the library or to the giant activity place (Stay N Play) or to Get Air, the trampoline park. Or in nice warm weather, she has taken him to her place to swim in her pool. She has a dog, Toby, and Wyatt says they go to Toby's house. When we have him, I pick him up around 9 and either take him some place (I'm really not comfortable taking him to a playground yet because I'm not able to climb up with him, and I worry that he will fall), or more often bring him back to our place, he calls it Papa's house. He always wants to know if Papa is in the truck and if not, if we are going to Papa's house to see Papa, "and Penny, too," (the dog) "and Baby, too" our adopted kitten. When we come here we have five acres to explore and end up "taking Penny for a walk" and just enjoying being outdoors, which he seems to love. Sometimes we take him to the mall playground (soft surfaces) and then to Chic-fil-a. for lunch then home for a nap then more play then I take him to "the office" where Mindy picks him up from Corey and helps her get through the dinner, bath, bedtime routine which has become quite the challenge with two. He doesn't have a boring life and I think he will be so much richer for all the diverse stimulation.

Oh, yes, we have an adopted kitten - a calico who was either born under the house or was abandoned there. She was about two to three weeks old when we heard her, and I enticed her out with tuna. Then she wormed her way into our lives, won Penny over (more or less) and then figured out how to get out the dog door and ultimately got pregnant before she was five or six months old, had an abortion and got spayed, recovered for about a week, then started going out again - at night only - she sleeps all day and hunts all night, most nights and has brought us two dead mice and one very alive baby squirrell who got away from her and we caught it and took it back outside when "Baby" wasn't around. No name has really stuck with her, so I told the vet it was Bibi. I tried JodieFoster, but that was silly.

On a more serious note, my extended family has decided I am a disgrace to my country - and to them - because of my Facebook posts and they want nothing to do with me. So, I guess once again, my mouth (or my words, at least) have gotten me into trouble. I'm not inclined at this point to stop saying what I believe to be true, to stop standing up for what I believe, and actually I have nothing to lose at this point. If your family will "divorce" you for your political/moral stand on something because they disagree with you, I think that's sad. What is a life worth if a person can't defend his or her belief system, can't say so when he/she sees something as unjust or unfair or outright wrong? Did it do me any good? I don't know; people said it did, but then they were people who agreed with me but didn't post as stridently as I did. I'm actually okay with strident. At 77 years old, I'm grateful I'm still able to be strident, and I'm not about to cow-tow to someone else's feelings about how I should live my life or speak my truth. If you're not making a difference, even a small one in your own little circle, then you're just taking up space. I'm indignant about this president and I'm allowed to be indignant, as they were allowed to be indignant about Obama. I admired and respected Obama and I didn't argue with them or decide I couldn't be around them when I knew they "hated" him. I just changed the subject. If they didn't like what I said about Trump, they didn't have to read it. My mother-in-law, I know, would be broken hearted to know of this rift. She won't hear about it from me. We plan to see her at the end of the year, and it has been too long since we saw her last. She will be 105 on December 28th, for heaven's sake. It's way too long to live for anyone so crippled up and deaf. She's totally immobile and cannot hear at all, so she's shut out from the world and in constant pain or is asleep. No one would want her fate, I'm pretty sure. 

Okay. I posted. Not my finest hour, but maybe next time... 

Wednesday, September 27, 2017

I'm lightening up today, offering up a poem (I think) that I wrote for an assignment when I participated in the University of Iowa MOOC writer's class. Let me know if you can relate!

Baggage—or Not

I forgot the bags, again.
There’s a note on the dashboard,
“DON’T FORGET THE BAGS!”
But I was distracted,
And now I’m in air conditioning
Pushing a cart, reading my list, and wondering
Should I go back to the car?

On the floor in the back seat are bags—
From Publix, from Fresh Market,
From Whole Foods and Target.
There’s one from a posh store in Virginia,
From a visit to friends who lived there,
A turquoise bag from a vacation in Maine,
And one with whales from Alaska.
There’s a nice one from Trader Joe’s
With compartments for bottles of wine.
There are two with bright green and white stripes
That keep frozen foods from melting.
Some have long straps that fit over the shoulder,
But most can be carried by hand.
Several are made of strange crinkly fabric,
Some made of cotton and canvas.
Many of them are Polypropylene
Which is basically recycled plastic.

But they’re all in the car

And I’m in the store.

Friday, September 8, 2017

I'm still thinking about parenting and parenthood. When we moved into our first "family" neighborhood, our son was six and starting school. There were neighbors with kids, and a couple with boys about his age. Nobody brought a casserole, but one mother introduced herself and said they had three boys and that their kids "are my life." I walked away from that conversation thinking, "that's never going to be me." I wanted a child or maybe even children with that man; I knew that, and the one I had was beautiful and smart and complex. I loved him completely, but he wasn't my life. He enriched my life, but he didn't define me. I had dreams and desires and goals that didn't include him, maybe in the knowledge that he would grow up and move on and have his own life, or maybe I didn't even think that far ahead. I was just selfish enough to want my own life separate from being a parent. Two years later, when he had just turned nine, we had a daughter, and she, too enriched my life/our lives, but I hung onto my life as a student and finished college, much of it while simultaneously being her mother. When she was seven, I took a full-time job and had a career that I loved that lasted until after she finished college. I'll never know how much my attitude toward parenting influenced either or both of their attitudes toward parenting; he never wanted kids and she always wanted them. And, as I have written, she has two now and parents very differently than she was parented. I would love some feedback on this post; have you looked at your attitude toward being a mother (or father)? Did you have a "style" of parenting? Did you mirror your mother's or do the opposite? Can you look back and see what your parents did/didn't do and get a handle on how that did or did not influence your decisions and attitudes about your own children? If you are a grandparent, do you watch your grown children and see that their parenting techniques are different from yours? If so, how?

Monday, September 4, 2017

Grandma, again

My daughter had another baby - her last. She's forty, so that's a good thing. We had a girl, Amelia Catherine. Her 104-year-old great-grandmother's name is Catherine, and Amelia is the ninth great-grandchild, and the first namesake. That's a wonderful thing. I've been a grandmother for two years now, so I probably have a handle on it, you might think. But with each new stage of development of my grandson, I have to learn new skills, so no, I don't. Besides, I'm a terrible pushover. I never was any good at boundaries and sticking to the rules. It's a wonder my kids survived me, and I'm probably worse with my grandson, and will be even worse with my granddaughter, no doubt. But this isn't about that (although maybe I should give all that some thought and write about it). It's about this:
Here’s what I perceive to be the difference between philosophy about child rearing today and yesterday: Formerly, doctors encouraged mothers to take care of themselves first over their newborns, believing that a rested, well-fed mother was the best mother. It mirrored the oxygen mask over your face first, THEN take care of others. It wasn’t that babies were ignored, it was just that their needs came second in the knowledge that babies will often get what they need, if not always what they want, because they are pretty demanding. And cute.
Today, so much science has gone into child development and so much is known about infants and their needs in order to provide the baby with the optimum experience in order to give it all the advantages it can have, keep it safe from any health hazards, and nurture it into an extraordinary being with superior brain power. In the meantime, Mom has been put on the back burner. She is supposed to do everything to give her baby every advantage. If she doesn’t she’s a bad mother.

There has to be a happy medium. We don’t know yet if these extremely well-cared for, 24/7 monitored, climate controlled, organically diapered, sufficiently stimulated infants and toddlers with just the right amount of play dates and educational toys are going to be happier, more well-adjusted people or if they are going to wonder what the hell happened when all the focus is no longer on them. Would a little benign neglect help them to get a glimpse of the real world and allow them to become a little more resourceful? But more to the point, would Mom taking some time for herself, maybe briefly ignoring the optimum experience for the baby/toddler, and settling for “good enough” help her to be a less-stressed person? How is all this anxiety caused by trying to do everything perfectly so as to not fail your baby helping either one of you? There's so much focus on the child now, I'm wondering about Mom. How is she doing? Maybe we need to ask.

Saturday, June 3, 2017

I see I haven't entered a blog post this year, and it's almost half over! 

I signed up for a college online class on writing - free - from the University of Iowa, and the assignments are coming hot ant heavy, and I'm writing fiction, but this last assignment was to write about immigration - really just moving from one place (physically or psychologically) to another - perhaps to a place of awareness, greater understanding, more acceptance, or actually to a new place and all that implies. I've done that - several times, and I don't know whether to just pull out one of the pieces I wrote about moving or to tackle something heavier. Still debating. In the meantime, I wrote one article about being a grandma:


We had waited so long, and it didn’t seem like it was going to happen, so I decided to adjust to the reality facing me. Driving to work one morning, I just let the tears roll down my cheeks; I wasn’t going to be a grandmother. It wasn’t the end of the world; I had two amazing grown kids and they were happily married to people who loved them to death, so they would be fine. So would I, I assured myself.
“But I would have been so good at it!” I wailed to my disinterested windshield.
So, it was settled; move on. Count your blessings. So what if most of the people you know have already had grandchildren? Some of them, I might add, had great-grandchildren; such was the plight of a couple who marries in their late twenties and has their last baby in their late thirties, eight years after their first. As it was, we were asked at a PTA meeting when our “baby” girl was in elementary school, “Oh, are you Corey’s grandparents?” The woman had the good grace to apologize when we set her straight, but we had a reminder that we were very late to the party. Lateness catches up with all of us.
The older one, the boy child, made it perfectly clear from day one, he was not having children. Sorry Mom, sorry Dad, no kids for this one. Too selfish, too much wander lust. We had put pins in all the places he had been all over the world; we believed him.
But our girl? She loved being in charge, loved playing school, and then loved being a teacher and always seemed that she would be the one to have children. It wasn’t that she was saying she wouldn’t, she was pretty tight lipped about that stuff. But there was the miscarriage earlier in her marriage, and I figured she didn’t want to put herself through the emotional roller coaster again. Besides, they were in debt and kept talking about wanting to owe no one. I’m familiar with the concept, but never managed to accomplish that goal myself, and I was in my seventies at that point. Seventy-five, to be exact.
So Christmas came and we went to spend it with our children in north-central Florida since their coming to us was impossible; we were in a one-bedroom apartment in a senior citizen community. We had fun, of course; both of my kids and their spouses are uniquely delightful people, their friends are nice, and we felt welcome in our daughter’s home. We even had our own bedroom.
Fairly late on Christmas night we were settled down ready to go to sleep when we heard a light tapping on the door. I got up and answered it and my daughter and her husband were standing there with a gift bag.
“We forgot to give you this,” Doug said. Corey flipped on the overhead light.
“It can wait until tomorrow,” I said, squinting into the now lighted room, “You don’t have to do it now.”
“Mom.” I know that tone, very well, so I acquiesced.
I peered into the gift bag and pulled out a very, very tiny onesie that was emblazoned with the words, “Our family makes cute babies.” Not as quick on the uptake as I wish I was, I was confused for a second or two before the synapses kicked in and I got it. We WERE going to be grandparents, after all.
We scrambled. No way, after all the fussing I had done about not being a grandma, was I going to not be nearby for every minute of it. And she wanted us there. She made that very clear. As it was, she went into labor when we had but a week to go to move lock, stock, and barrel after selling our place, all our furniture and packing up our U-Haul. So we abandoned our nearly finished project and took off to be there for his birth. They hadn’t wanted to know the baby’s gender, so it was a surprise to everyone, and he was glorious and perfect and my daughter was a trooper and looked like she was going to be the most amazing mom with a very involved dad.
We rushed back to south Florida, gathered up our U-Haul, said good-bye to our friends a second time, and moved into a place our son rented for us to be close. Seven minutes from her house to our house.
So began my life as a grandmother.
Can I back up?
My mother and father lived near me, too, when I had my first, and I went to her for...everything. When she would take our son, I handed him over with relief. He’s yours, now. Do with him what you like; I trust you to know what’s best. All I wanted was some time to myself, and all she wanted was time with her grandson; it was a perfect fit. I had Doctor Spock, dog-eared, and my mother. I wasn’t confident, actually, but I wasn’t terribly anxious. If others had done it, so could I, right? Made sense to me.
It was before the Internet, you get that, right? My mother knew everything, since she knew more than I did, and what she didn’t know, we relied on Dr. Spock and the pediatrician to know. Somehow we made it more or less intact. Cloth diapers and rubber pants, Tide detergent, slept on his tummy, took a bottle with him to bed, slept when he was sleepy, ate when he was hungry, and played on his own or with neighbor kids. He didn’t even go to regular kindergarten.
No arranged play dates, no special activities sessions, no parks with chopped up rubber tires as a bed, no sleep science, no organic food, no child restraint car seats, no organic diapers, no sensitive skin detergent, no sun block. Probably watched too much TV, unmonitored for age-appropriate material. His sister, our new mother, fared not a whole lot better. Pampers were available by then, but mostly everything else was the same, except my mother got sick when I was pregnant with her, and by the time my little girl was almost five years old, her grandmother died—cancer.
I never spent enough time telling my mother that no way could I have done it without her and how scared I was to finish raising this little girl without her. I hated it that she would not be there for her grandson, the apple of her eye (I understand now) who was just 12 at the time and would go on to do all kinds of amazing things that would have lit up her eyes with joy. Maybe remembering how I felt when she died was part of my sadness when I thought I would never be a grandmother, who knows?
Anyway, fast forward. Like I said, he is amazing, my grandbaby, and at 22 months he loves his Nana and she is over the moon about him.
So, I’m having a conversation with a friend.
“How’s it going with you and Corey?”
“Good...”
“Do I hear some hesitation in there?”
“Well, you know, everything is different now. I’m not the authority ... on anything, actually. It’s as if I didn’t raise her brother and her and keep them from certain death and dismemberment. Now I know nothing.”
“Seriously?”
“Well, it feels that way.”
I am a retired psycho-therapist. I listened to people talking just like I was talking. My comments were feelings of inadequacy, of powerlessness. I felt shoved aside, stupid. My feeling was valid, if unsupported by facts.
That night I went to bed remembering a particular session I had with a young woman going through some feelings of inadequacy herself. Her insecurity had to do with her job. She felt unappreciated; she stepped up and filled in where needed, she stayed late when someone was needed because she didn’t have children at home and her co-workers did. No one seemed to notice. I had a sign on my desk, “Start where the client is.” We all have a tendency to get a person to where we want them to be—to help them see that there is a way to take action that will help them to feel in control that will alleviate those feeling of being overlooked and undervalued. We want to offer reasonable, but perfectly meaningless, platitudes when what we have to do is validate the person’s feelings in the moment and help them move forward when they are ready.
I imagined that my daughter was in a therapist’s office telling the professional that her mother was snarky with her because she, the baby’s mother, wanted things done a certain way, based on all the new science available about parenting and sleep patterns and screen time and sugar and, and, and. Oh, and KNOWING HER BABY. So, maybe she wanted to not hurt her mother’s feelings; she depended on her after all, and her baby, now growing into a little boy, loved his nana. And it was clear his nana would throw herself in front of a speeding train to save this child. But Nana was prickly about “the schedule,” looked askance at the rules about no screen time before naptime, got a bemused look on her face when she heard complaints that he only got nine hours sleep last night and he needed to have twelve.
“I know she thinks it’s no big deal,” I can hear her saying; “I know things were different for her, but I feel like I need to try to use all the expert advice I can. People spend a lot of time working all this stuff out; there’s science behind it, and she dismisses it.”
I’m imagining she’s saying these things, but I have a good imagination.
Then I realize: I need to meet my daughter where she is. I need to join her in this parenting thing. I need to get online and read what she reads; it will be a way we can connect and stop being at odds. Just because I may think some of it is overdone and silly, and honestly I may still think that, but I owe her the effort. Who knows, I may learn something.
Wish me luck.