Thursday, May 6, 2010

Mother's Day

I'm predicting an unusual Mother's Day this year. I'm not exactly enamored with the duties of housekeeping and mothering these days, probably because I'm working two jobs and I'm completely riddled by stress from our current financial state and uncertain future. My two jobs demand less of me mentally and emotionally, but drain me physically and sap my patience, leaving me snippy and short-tempered most of the time. My nerves are raw and Her Nibs and The Boy are more than mild irritants at times. But as everyone knows, we're not allowed to say we don't like being a mother. It's always suppose to be the most fulfilling, even blissful, part of our lives.

Naturally, to combat my struggle, I've turned to books. I've started reading this book called "The Mommy Myth", which has some interesting ideas, but is also very inflammatory. The authors suggest the idea of "intensive mothering" (constant vigilance, bend all of our lives and time to our children's needs, extravagant theme birthday parties and on and on) has been promoted by celeb-moms, tv shows, movies and the media at large to the great detriment of the women's movement and the sanity of women everywhere. According to them, the media has invented a conflict between stay at home moms and working mothers, whereas actual women don't divide themselves (since we often move in and out of these categories during different parts of our lives) or harbor resentment for women making different choices. The authors provide interesting perspectives on the evolution of our cultural concept of motherhood over the past 6 decades, but do not offer a good alternative for what motherhood should look like instead of the intensive mothering that has become 'common sense' in our time.

I believe in the value of family and the role women are called to perform. I believe in the Proclamation on the Family. I believe that motherhood is a divine duty. Sometimes there's an emphasis on the divine. Lately, there's been an emphasis on the duty. I hope that my children won't suffer because their care isn't my primary enjoyment. But even before all of this, even before I was working again, I've worried about how my children are affected by having me in particular as their mother. I hope that I'm not scarring them. I hope I'm preparing them to be emotionally healthy adults who communicate honestly and without any passive aggression. I hope they are secure in who they are and work towards their goals without fear. In fact, I even wrote them a little song. It's incomplete, but in honor of Mother's Day and all the women who sacrifice and persevere out of duty and joy, here it is:

Hush, little baby, don't say a word.
Mama's right here, gonna sing like a bird.
Don't always know what I'm suppose to do,
But I know, I'll always love you.

It just may well be I'm missing some tools, 
My brain's misaligned or I've listened to fools,
Whatever my failings, I hope that you'll see
I've given my all to help you be who you'll be.

I'm doing my best to disinherit you from my troubles,
To fill your life with hope and fun and bubbles,
Encircle you with truth and power,
     strength and confidence and shower
     virtue on you every hour
Raise you to soar.


Hush, little baby, don't say a word.
Mama's right here, gonna sing like a bird.
Don't always know what I'm suppose to do,
But I know, I'll always love you.




3 comments:

Cacooning said...

I'm sorry it's so stressful right now. I wish we lived closer to each other and could take turns helping each other out. I love your song, especially the first/last stanza. You are fabulous.

Love you.

Another Piece Of Chocolate said...

I often have many of these, in fact most of these, thoughts and feelings about my role as a mother, about the inadequacies of my mothering, and about my lack of bliss in the countless roles of mothering (nurturer, nurse, teacher, exemplar, playmate, etc.). I do know that I am growing and stretching through the experience and I believe that it is helping me to become the person Heavenly Father wants me to be. But at the rate I am going it is going to take a very very very.......long time! Know your not alone in all your feeling :- )

Urban Tangerine said...

You love and nurture your children.
So, you DON'T like being tired, strapped for resources and full of uncertainty. Theme parties are a personal peeve of mine as are extravagant goodie bags and all the other unreasonable expectations of parenting. That is certainly not part of the definition. That's a preference. You need a more authentic definition of motherhood. I'm interested in what you come up with.

Love you!