I
am wandering in a strange border land. I do not have any tiny
children. But my children are not grown up. I have four teenagers,
two of whom can vote. My oldest daughter will only be visiting home
rather than living here at all this year.
It’s
very strange.
When
I had tons of little children that was my whole day. I focused on
bottoms and noses and little hands. I hurried. But never fast enough.
I knew what I was doing.
I
was teaching them to stay alive. Don’t touch the stove. Don’t
make a cape and jump down the stairs onto the tile floor. Don’t
eat that; it isn’t food. Don’t run in front of that car.
But
I am realizing that having taught them to stay alive, I am rubbish at
teaching them how to live which brings me to this new stage of
motherhood that I like to call, “Stop this ride, I’d like
to get off.”
It
isn’t that my children are difficult or unpleasant. I would
rather hang out with my kids than any other human beings I know. They
are smart and funny and kind and hardworking. They are charming and
good. It isn’t them at all.
It’s
me. I see how smart and wonderful they are. But I also see the vast
reservoir of knowledge that I either do not have or have completely
failed to transmit. I lie awake at night envisioning a cycle of
visits to penitentiaries, mental health facilities and the undersides
of bridges visiting my much loved children.
I
see them wandering lost into the world, hands outstretched into
some Dickensian nightmare. I see them hands outstretched, begging,
“Please sir, have you any biscuits? My mother failed to teach
how to read a recipe and I haven’t eaten in months.”
“Alms
for the poor good lady, my mother underemphasized budgeting and I now
live in a van down by the river eating a steady diet of government
cheese.”
I
see them begging for their freedom in courts of law. “Mother
never taught us to file taxes properly. I didn’t know it was
evasion.” I see them falling in with a bad crowd. “What
certainly I would love to shoot up heroin. My mother rather slacked
at giving me a solid foundational sense of self so I’m up for
anything.”
The
days are no better than the nights. It is a whirlwind of terrifying
statements from them and terrifying statements from me. Them: “Mom,
do poppy seeds come from poppies? Wait never mind.”
“Is
there a law that I have to visit you when I am old?”
In
light of my inability to transmit knowledge as a whole I have given
in to yelling snippets. “Don’t eat ice cream every day in
college.” or “STD’s are no laughing matter.”
or “Update your home and car insurance annually for the best
rates and coverage.” “Never rent to own.” “The
lottery is a tax on the stupid.” It goes on all day.
It’s
exhausting. For all of us. They are just trying to grow up and go out
into the world. I am just trying to keep them from messing up. Don’t
mess up. For heaven’s sake — keep it together.
I
should have more confidence. First, they are all amazing. Second, I
am living proof that no matter how dense and useless you are as a
teenager you can still cobble together a nice life.
But
mostly, I am proof that failure is not the end of the world. In fact
one of my greatest gifts was that I failed and failed hugely right
out of the gate.
By
my senior year of high school I had completed my plummet from honor
student to daytime drunk. For a million reasons I took the road less
traveled (by people with good sense). I went from having a
scholarship lined up to having no plans for the future.
Then
I topped that. I drank at a school function. Two weeks before my
graduation I was expelled. I did manage to graduate, thanks to my
mother and a bet I made with a teacher whom I sincerely hope has left
the profession.
I
fell so far. I landed really hard. Everyone knew. All of that bright
shining promise had decayed into the angriest meanest girl I have
ever known. But I couldn’t stay there. Then there was
nothing to do but begin again. So I did. I went to AA. I got a job. I
went back to the Church. I registered for college. I started a life.
All these years later, I remain surprised what a good life it has
been.
This
semester my daughter was working in a club at college on a group
project. One of the members of the group did no work whatsoever. For
the first time in her life my daughter faced a failure she could not
beat.
This
isn’t a kid who has had an easy go. She has always had to work
hard. I have watched her get thrown off a bucking horse, roll, dust
herself off and get back on. She understands hard. But this was the
first big failure that now amount of tough or try could save.
She
asked me what would happen. I thought about it. I wanted to say it
would all be fine. I even wanted to go help her fix it. Instead I
said, “You’re going to fail. You are going to fall down
and hit the bottom. All you can do is decide how you will get back
up.”
Ever
the ballerina, she thought for a moment and then said, “Fine. I
will land in a plié and bounce back up.” Which is
probably a more important lesson than my prepared remarks on Never
Buying Term Life Insurance.
I am me. I live at my house with my husband and kids. Mostly because I have found that people
get really touchy if you try to live at their house. Even after you explain that their towels are
fluffier and none of the cheddar in their fridge is green.
I teach Relief Society and most of the sisters in the ward are still nice enough to come.