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adolescence, attachment parenting, Awesome Women, Big, books, Books, children of cancer patients, Ireland, Janis Ian, Library, Life Lessons, Mother daughter relationship, Mother enough, mothering and guilt, movie Big, Mundanity, Northern Ireland, Poetry, Portland, reading, Reading, Summer Reading Flowchart, Summer Reading Infographic, Tom Hanks, wish come true, Words of Wisdom, World Book Day, Writing
After a fortune-telling machine grants his wish, 13 year-old Josh Baskin begins an adventure in the world of work and romance and in the adult body of Tom Hanks. We don’t need to watch the movie Big to predict the ending of the timeless tale behind it. We know that the boy who falls in love with the woman will eventually be pulled back to his thirteen year-old life, so we aren’t surprised by her response to his suggestion that she go back with him. “I’ve been there before. It’s hard enough the first time … you know what I mean?” she asks, and the almost immediate reality, “You don’t know what I mean …” We smile too, almost conspiratorially, as we watch him walk away from her, his body shrinking within the business suit that had fit just moments before, falling out of shoes that are too big. Be careful what you wish for …
As I have written before, my mother has a flair for transforming the most mundane task into something altogether fascinating. Just yesterday, as we talked on the phone, she was “doing a bit of ironing,” which transported me back to a typical childhood scene. She leaning over the ironing board, smoothing out with hot steam the wrinkles in my father’s shirts, pausing – for dramatic effect – to remind me to consider the lilies, to “mark her words” that there would be plenty of time for work and plenty of fish in the sea. Implicit in her explicit admonishment not to wish my life away, was the fact that she was not wishing my life away. Mostly, she struck an artful balance between shielding me from the world while empowering me to find the voice to explore its realities. But not all the time. Especially not when I was in the throes of the kind of teenage angst found in a Janis Ian ballad. In those moments, she must have longed for the hands of the clock to fly back to an easier time.
What goes around really does come around. Sometimes, when my teenage daughter announces, one hand on her hip, that she cannot wait to have her own apartment in a place where it rains all the time – notably not Ireland, the country of my birth, but somewhere infinitely more hip like Portland or Seattle – I find myself wanting to tell her that all of it, even the growing up part, is such a bad idea! It lasts but a moment, this longing to hold her as an infant in my arms once again, but it is a powerful moment that holds me in its grip just long enough to make me feel selfish and rather guilty.
Guilt and mothering. To satisfy my curiosity, I wondered where it would take me if I fed Google with those three words. Hardly surprising and almost instantaneously, our favorite search engine dutifully produced about 842,000 results on the topic. Somewhere in there, I’m sure of it, lies a discussion of the media maelstrom that swirled around the TIME magazine cover featuring a previously unknown Jamie Lynne Grumet breast-feeding her three year old son. How the ratings soared as all the experts weighed in on the subject of attachment parenting, extended breast-feeding, “baby-wearing,” and co-sleeping. The topic du jour for longer than a day, I remember everyone seemed to have something to say about it. For me, within all the noise was the matter of guilt, induced not by the cover photograph of a little boy at his mother’s breast, but by the question emblazoned in red next to it.
“Are you MOM ENOUGH?”
Naturally, I wanted to respond, “Why, yes. Yes, I am. Of course I am.” But perhaps the folks at TIME weren’t talking to me. Perhaps they were referring to some other woman whose credentials in mothering were inferior to Ms. Grumet’s or mine? No. They were speaking directly to me, and off I went to second-guess my expertise as a mother. But first, I had to grapple with the meaning of “enough” and “you” in the context of mothering, as opposed to grappling with these in the context of an Uncle Sam pointing at the whole country and saying he needed it.
Am I enough of a mother? What does TIME mean by “enough?” I know what I mean when I compare something “good” to that which I find “good enough.” (In the end, I think I’d prefer something a bit more sentimental as my epitaph than “here lies one who was mom enough.”) Perhaps I am taking it too far. Then again, probably not any farther than countless headlines and results of clinical studies have taken me over the course of my mothering, many of which have prompted me to question if any and every difficulty experienced by my child could be attributed to some tiny but critical error made by me. Struggling academically? Bottle-feeding might be the culprit. Low birth weight? Poor nutritional choices on the part of the mother during pregnancy. Talkative in class? A little immature? It must be something to do with her always being the youngest, at least six months younger than everyone else in the class. Whose fault was that, exactly? After all, Arizona’s Education Code stipulates that a child is considered “five years old” and eligible for kindergarten only if her date of birth falls not in December but before September 1 of the current school year. Clearly, this was poor family planning. Again, my fault. Recurrent ear infections? As a particularly cranky on-call pediatrician guilt-tripped me one Saturday morning when my child was screaming with a double ear infection: “Well, she is a day-care baby so what do you expect?” I remember retorting that I only taught part-time at the college. Unfazed, he reiterated to me, as though I were in fifth grade, “A day-care baby is a day-care baby.” I was just not “mom enough” for the good doctor. Nor was he “good enough” for me. I will not write here the retort I had silently reserved for him – my mother is reading this, after all.
Ah, but I digress. One of my wishes came true this weekend, when I discovered that my teenage daughter loves to read. Real books, too. None of these starting-at-the-back manga narratives that I still don’t “get,” not even the stuff of all those electronic games I railed against – for the Nintendo DS, then the Game Cube, the Wii, the Itouch, and the Ipad. It is almost painful to acknowledge that only a few years ago, the mere promise of a new game was almost enough to convince her to read from an actual book with actual pages for fifteen minutes. That and perhaps the tiniest of guilt trips . . .
Imagine my glee this afternoon as my daughter rattled off her opinion about Chinua Ahebe’s Things Fall Apart and recommended that I read it. Coolly, I pretended I had never heard of the novel, while visions of our very own mother-daughter book club danced in my head. Just yesterday, while strains of Ray la Montagne’s “Trouble” on filled the car, my brilliant girl noticed “Ray Montag” on the radio display which led her to begin a conversation about Ray Bradbury’s recent passing and Montag, the book-burning fireman, in Fahrenheit 451. A conversation. With me. About a novel. Be still my heart! Could this possibly be the same recalcitrant reader who, when confronted with her seventh grade summer reading assignment, counted out loud the 211 pages of My Brother Sam is Dead, painstakingly did the math, and then announced that a fortnight should take care of it, at the glacial pace of a chapter a day?
And then an epiphany. She is reading different books, but she has been reading all along. Reading her world, assessing the situations in which she finds herself, sometimes through no choice of her own. It matters not if it is manga or Shakespeare, the label on the back of a shampoo bottle, a text from a friend, a comic, a peace sign, a pink ribbon, a green light. Inhabiting the world of words and symbols, printed or digital, she has been reading, finding meaning. And when it means something, it really matters.
I have written before about how my daughter’s adolescence was unfairly interrupted by my cancer diagnosis. Some day, when she emerges from what I once heard Whoopi Goldberg brilliantly describe as “the teen tunnel,” I will ask her if reading books was the thing that helped her through it. In the meantime, I am curious. Which books should she read this summer? She has already worked her way through the infographic below. The result? Animal Farm. As it turns out, an unopened hardback edition has been waiting for her in my bookcase for almost as long as she has been alive.
Jan Baird said:
Ah, I’m thrilled to see “Unbroken” in your clever diagram. That’s my summer reading. When my soon-to-be-ex-husband told me it contained too much torture/violence for my delicate and sensitive nature, I knew I had to read it. My oldest son absolutely adores to read, and was heading off to the library yesterday after the four-hour birthday lunch we had enjoyed. In the course of discussing our favorite reads, he said, “Of course, you will like it, Mom. The author wrote “Seabiscuit,” after all.” He gave me the carte blanche I needed. Thanks for your beautiful post about the guilt trips we take as moms. As a mother of three I’m guilty of guilt trips, too. Isn’t it wonderful to see a child following in your footsteps just about when you’ve given up all hope? Brava to you for being more than mom enough. xx
Yvonne said:
Oh, Jan, isn’t that the best diagram? I want to learn how to make one myself. I love that your soon-to-be-ex has unwittingly enouraged you to read “Unbroken.” Sounds like you had a great day yesterday. Much deserved!
If guilt trips were an Olympic event, I would win gold!!
Yes, there was nothing like seeing her so rapt in books!! Loved it!! I just wish it didn’t take me quite so long to get a post written!!!
x
Nancy's Point (@NancysPoint) said:
Yvonne,
Yes, somehow motherhood and guilt trips are intertwined aren’t they? Now as my kids are young adults I also ask myself “was I mom enough?” Generally, I can quite honestly say, “I think I was.” And of course, the work of parenting is never over…but neither is the joy. That part keeps getting better and better.
I’m delighted your daughter is such an avid reader. All my kids are as well. I have so many books I want to get to. Right now I’m delving into the “Emperor of All Maladies.”
Have a great summer full of lots of reading!
Yvonne said:
Wishing you warm summer’s days with nothing to do except read!
Marie Ennis-O'Connor (@JBBC) said:
*SIgh* I literally get transported when I read your words..transported back in time to another kitchen, and my own mother ironing my father’s shirts, while I sat beside her listening to her own Irish mother brand of wisdom and love – I would give anything to be able to click my fingers and go back in time to just such a moment again. Thanks for the gift of your beautiful writing Yvonne.
Yvonne said:
Marie, that is so lovely of you. Thank you so much. What is it about ironing or “smoothing” that is just so evocative of childhood back home?? I can just picture our mothers and grandmothers in their kitchens. My mother ironed EVERYTHING!!
So, I couldn’t believe it when I found this today. Had no idea (but why would we be surprised) that Heaney had written about his own mother doing the ironing … it will blow you away:
The Smoothing Iron by Seamus Heaney
Often I watched her lift it
from where its compact wedge
rode the back of the stove
like a tug at the anchor.
To test its heat she’d stare
and spit in its iron face
or hold it up next her cheek
to divine the stored danger.
Soft thumps on the ironing board.
Her dimpled angled elbow
and intent stoop
as she aimed the smoothing iron
like a plane into linen,
like the resentment of women.
To work, her dumb lunge says,
is to move a certain mass
through a certain distance,
is to pull your weight and feel
exact and equal to it.
Feel dragged upon. And buoyant.
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Lois Hjelmstad said:
As the mother of four older children (if I can call people in their 50s “children”), I can FINALLY say, “I think I was mother enough.” They are smart, funny, and successful and on days like Mother’s Day, I am showered with lovely notes extolling my motherliness. It is VERY rewarding after all those years of doubting myself. So, WAAAAIIIIIITTTTT for it. And smile.
Yvonne said:
I love that, Lois!!
candidaabrahamson said:
Wonderful post. And I, as an infographic maven, absolutely adore this one. Glad to be introduced to your blog.
Yvonne said:
Thank you so much! And I yours 🙂
pinkunderbelly said:
The mere fact that you ask if you’re mother enough tells me that you are! It’s the hardest job I’ve ever had with the worst pay, but the benefits are pretty great! I have one reader and one non-reader who is slowly coming around and discovering the joys of losing herself in a book. She loves to pass her books along to her favorite adults, and while I can think of a lot of other books I’d rather read than The Goddess Girls, sharing the books binds us together, and that’s what it’s all about. Love this post.
Yvonne said:
Thank you so much, Nancy! The benefits are crazy good, especially when you see the better parts of yourself in your children, right? I’m thinking the planets must be aligned – yesterday, she asked if I would buy her a caligraphy pen and a pad of writing paper and envelopes … to actually write letters to her friends. Today, she needs a book of stamps. How great is that! 🙂
Claire 'Word by Word' said:
What a beautiful moment and impressive novels that your daughter mentions. My daughter doesn’t like to read (though still likes me to), but I am somewhat comforted that though she is only 10 she has already written and illustrated quite a few of her own books, she’s much more into creating the stories herself and sharing them with friends. So all those library visits do pay off, they just have to find their own passionate angle I guess.
I love that flowchart and the fact that there are already favourites of mine on it. I want to read ‘The Lifeboat’ and the two Titanic novels I picked up in the Titanic Belfast Museum this month (yes I have N.Ireland connection too), ‘A Night to Remember’ and ‘And the Band Played On’ and then I must tackle Murakami’s 1Q84 which has been on the shelf a while. For now, I’m reading Barbara Kingsolver’s ‘Prodigal Summer’ which seems appropriate with this mini heatwave we’re experiencing.
Yvonne said:
Well now, I’m intrigued by the N.Ireland connection!! Hope you had a great visit there and that the weather behaved.
The visits to the library will keep paying off for your daughter, I’m sure of it – not to mention her mother’s appetite for great books!
I LOVE the flowchart too – I wish it were a giant poster for my office.
I am reading a collection of Love Stories from The New Yorker – “Nothing but You.” Found it in a great little bookstore yesterday. It’s a treasure.
Claire 'Word by Word' said:
Thanks for the encouragement, I’m trying to get my daughter to read in English, she says she can’t, so I got her a Garfield book and I notice she only asks me to read every second or third page. Cartoon type books with pictures and speech bubbles are great for building confidence I find and that genre really prolific here.
Yes, I had a fabulous 6 day visit to NI first week of June and they’d had summer temperatures for a week (such good weather they’ve put a curfew on Bangor – can’t blame the young going a bit crazy when Northern Ireland’s climate becomes Spain-like).
Hadn’t been there for 15 years, went for a family wedding in Helen’s Bay and I was best-person for the groom 🙂 Interesting to meet so many family and ironic in that I disovered that the family actually originated from France, fleeing persecution in the 1500’s. I discover I have come full circle without knowing it, as I am now citizen of France. Aint life grand 🙂
Yvonne said:
A whole week of summer weather back home … I’m jealous. Every time I go back, it pours which I suppose serves its purpose in reminding me why I left 🙂
Helen’s Bay is such a gorgeous spot, isn’t it?
My daughter is a lover of all things comic-book as well and was obsessed with manga, anime etc for the longest time. I was a bit of a snob about it, but in truth I think those “graphic novels” really played a key role in building a pretty impressive vocabulary. So I have to take back all the negative comments I made 🙂
Yes, every day some new circle closes. Life is definitely grand 🙂
Anonymous said:
Yvonne you must have been the best reader ever, I can remember clearly when you had chicken pox, and we couldnt carry the books quick enough. Wish we could do that all over again unfortunately time doesn’t allow that to happen. Happy memories xxx ma
Yvonne said:
I remember the whole chicken pox episode like it was yesterday and all those books I read for the duration 🙂 You should have had shares in Easons!!
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Reblogged this on considering the lilies and commented:
In celebration of World Book Day, I am remembering last summer when I realized, among other things, that my daughter loves to read . . .
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