What did those kids do to that nice lady?

Tuesday, June 27, 2023

I stood on the football field, a smattering of teenage adrenaline and body odor  circling my watery eyes. My son had just finished his first season of high school football, defeating their cross town rival in the last game. All of us parents made our way down to the field, greedy for a photo opportunity that couldn’t be refused with our pimply, sweaty boys. Of course my son still tried to escape my shutter happy finger but I chased him down anyway in a shameless, flip flop sprint, shouting his name with the desperation only a Mama can cull for she knows to ferociously grasp this moment before it slips too suddenly to that thief named Time who never gets caught despite such dirty antics. Because sure enough, there that thief sat on my shoulder as I watched my son disappear down the corridor with his teammates, laughter echoing then quieting, and into my ear he whispered: one season down. Only three to go. 

The days are long, they said. The years are short, they promised. 

 How true this promise felt in young motherhood where each day felt like a rinse and repeat of the one before. But standing under the dimming lights of a high school scoreboard, I grew resentful of this outrageous promise that nobody told you came with an expiration date. My days are now mercilessly ripped off the calendar and tossed aside into a blurry pile of practices and schoolwork and first dates and driver’s licenses and hormones and in the center of it all me, a mother, once young, now seasoned, standing in the eye of the hurricane as it swirls without my consent. Where are my long days, I scream into the storm. Take me back to a long day! Take me back to a day where the clock ticked molasses and two toddlers sat on my hips with little words on their little lips: What are we going to do today, Mama? 

Those early days so long with the weight of monotony that this young mother would fantasize of teenagers slamming doors in her face, demanding she leave them alone. The weight of days with mornings so early that six am felt late as a paddling three year old terrorist would poke me awake with demands and negotiations. The weight of days where I felt so grateful to be able to stay home with my kids while simultaneously drowning in it’s loneliness. The weight of days where the three of us watched as Daddy drove away and we were left, two of us in diapers and one of us the bearer of every giggle or gaggle, the singular witness of tantrums and traumas and tears. The lucky sole recipient of snotty kisses and tiny bear hugs. For better and for worse, I never missed a single thing. 

What a cruel twist of fate parenthood is. To spend so many long days dreaming of life outside constant mothering while all the while that mischievous thief assumes his position and does his deed. He takes each discarded day and crumples them into neat little balls before tossing them aside for me to wade through years later as I search desperately for the small faces and tiny voices of my children. The pile grows tall and thick and I sit in the middle of it as I watch my son sprint down the football field and dream of college. I sit in the middle of it as my daughter’s legs grow longer than mine as she morphs from girl to woman. I sit in the middle of this pile of days, my hands clenched around such carelessly discarded crumpled days, and I wish so very badly to open one and slip back into that day, even for just a moment. 

Slip back into a day so drenched in California perfection, it lulls us down to the beach, this Mama a pack mule with enough snacks and drinks and toys to occupy us for hours. I brush sand off pb&j’s, chase you with spraying sunscreen and hold you close as waves crash over us until we grow water weary and collapse for a few minutes, the sun warming our slick, wrinkly bodies as we all lie on the towel together, each one of my hips a home for one wet head, the tangled hair of my children indistinguishable. My eyelids grow heavy but then a head pops up and you ask for another round in the waves, another dig for sand crabs. Come on, Mama! you say and we shake the dry sand off our bodies and run back toward the glistening Pacific, sparkling with promise. Do we have to go home, you ask? And this time as I un-crumple this day to slip into it again, I say no. We don’t. Let’s stay a little longer and watch the sky turn from blue to pink to purple. Let’s stay until the only light to lead us home is from the moon. Let’s stay forever. Stay with me here forever. 

We’re not told how to grieve for the small children we leave behind as they grow into young adults. We’re not told how their pint sized faces will haunt each room and the pencil marks on the doorframe will mock our memories. We’re not told how our love grows and shifts and morphs as our children get further away from childhood and how our hearts will ache with bittersweet longing as they edge into adulthood. It’s silly, isn’t it, to miss something, someone, you still have? But this is why we sprint across fields or stages or lawns in questionable footwear, shouting out your name because we understand that this moment comes but once. I understand that yesterday I was Mama, today I am Mom and tomorrow you’ll be gone into a life of your own creation. A life I can’t wait to watch unfold even as I mourn the childhood you left behind, it’s echos forever ringing in my ears. 

But tomorrow has not yet come. It is still today. It is always today. See? that pesky thief whispers into my ear. You still have time. 

Now go get that photo. 







Saturday, March 25, 2023

And Then She Was 14....

Dear Daughter,

14.

Do I need to say it?

Yeah. I do.

WHAT IS HAPPENING WHY SO FAST SOMEBODY HOLD ME. 


Being a parent is an insane experience. Just yesterday I was peeling your limp body off the ground after you collapsed with protest of leaving the park after a measly two hours, dreaming about a time when I would have more than five minutes alone that didn’t include locking myself in the bathroom and now today I’m standing outside your bedroom door, gently knocking before I come in and lie on your bed hoping to get a little more than five minutes with you. I try to catch up on the latest hot goss and use words like ‘sus’ and ‘facts’ just to watch your cheeks flare with embarrassment at my pathetic attempt to sound current when we all know I can’t even send a text without proper punctuation and fully spelled words. But I do it just to hear you say, Oh my god, Mom! Stop it! and then we laugh and my five minutes is up and I close your door gently behind me and I don’t cry at all. Nope. I’m totes fine. (Yes I know we don’t say totes anymore but I do what I want.)


Being 14 is hard. 


Half girl, half woman; these two parts of you collide in confusion as each one fights for attention. I’m so comfortable with the girl inside of you; I know she likes to snuggle and be kissed goodnight and feel reassured. I know her favorite sandwich is salami and mustard and she prefers salt and vinegar chips. She loves to play with her slime and always makes time to find someone the perfect gift. Her heart is wide open, strong, flexible. And she will never deny that yes, she just farted as we all collapse with laughter covering our noses. This girl I know inside out; this girl who came from me, who grew within me. 


Your woman is still a mystery to me and I don’t always know when she wants to shine and when she wants to be left alone. I hear her flirty chatter as she sits and does her makeup while FaceTiming her friends. She pays a little more attention to what she wears; I can even spot your woman in a pair of once forbidden jeans from time to time. She shaves her long legs and uses shower gels and lotions and could spend hours in Sephora. Her heart is still big and cavernous but she can easily pierce and puncture her mother’s precarious heart with careless words that tend to pair so well with burgeoning independence. Your woman, your girl, they spin me round in a dizzy daze as I tend to one then the other, shunned then snuggled on repeat. I do my best to honor both; I do my best to know which one of me you might want….my woman or my girl. Because they’re forever entwined, my dear daughter. We can’t escape either one. And together they will carry you onward even as your grip slips from one to the other. 


So as your strong, capable girl collides with your bold, curious woman, I’ll impart some of my very limited wisdom with you. 


Remember to keep a part of yourself for you only; hold on to your mystery as it is yours and yours only. Cherish what makes you stand out and let it lead you. Slow and steady wins the race. There is no race. Keep all of your books and fill your space with them. Don’t wear anything that everyone else is. Having lots of things can be fun but never let those things define you. Feel big. Love big. Laugh big. Find power in stillness. And always….always…always….return your shopping cart to the proper place. 


Happy 14th Birthday, my sunshine, my only sunshine. Loving you is the easiest thing I’ve ever done.


Love,

Mama

Her girl. And her woman. 







Monday, January 23, 2023

Ready, Bruh?

I’ve officially reached that stage of parenting where a toddler throwing a tantrum in the middle of Target makes me want to cry. Because that little voice is just so cute! I’ll smile compassionately at the depleted mom as I pass by her raging, snot filled child, desperate to communicate through my dewy eyes the one thing that no parent ever wants to hear: you’re gonna miss this one day! I don’t say it of course. I’m not a monster. I just want to prepare her for the day when that same terrorist toddler becomes a hormone infested teenager that calls her Bruh, and wouldn’t be caught dead with her in Target and wants to do things like get swoll and make protein shakes and get a driver’s license. 


A driver’s license. How did I get to this part of parenting where my son needs a driver’s license? I am not prepared for this, but I suppose my son probably should be so recently I reluctantly found myself as a passenger in my own car, with apparent genius first time driver at the wheel; teenage hormones raging as we crawled up and down the aisles of a vacant parking lot, me being told to chill as he played Frogger with parking lot pillars that suddenly seemed soclose; my sweaty hand gripping the side handle of the door as if it was the last bottle of rosé on Earth; my face desperately trying to mask panic as I reminded myself that I was the adult here; I needed to impart wisdom, however unwanted, and remain calm. Patient. Chill.  


At one point he clicked the blinker to make a right turn, but like a renegade, went left. I opened my mouth to highlight this error, but, seasoned teenage mom that I am, recognized how futile that would be so instead I just suggested to him that maybe instead of this driving lesson, he could hop in the backseat and I’ll sing Wheels on the Bus as many times as he wants, all the parts of the bus and if he’s a really good boy we can drive through McDonald’s on the way home and get ice cream. He looked at me and smirked a smile, as if I wasn’t being completely serious and I smiled back, my eyes lingering a little too long, searching for that song starved little boy hiding inside this man child next to me. But before I even had adequate time to tear up:


DUDE PILLAR!


God, mom, please chill! You’re being so annoying, bruh!


Oh, I’m annoying??  I’m annoying? You wanna know what was annoying? That one time you didn’t poop for seven straight days when you were three years old and we couldn’t leave the house, held hostage by bowels. THAT was annoying. THAT was so not chill, bruh. 


But I didn’t say this. Because I’m the adult. The calm, patient adult. I just shove all my feelings down  like a respectable mother does and then suggested to my son that we should probably practice parking for a few minutes and he should probably pick a spot super far away from any pillars of any kind. He pulled into a spot and before he could begin to back out, we both noticed another car breezily entering the parking lot. The empty parking lot. The parking lot we came to specifically so we could endanger only the lives of ourselves and who do these people think they are entering public property when so clearly a mother’s life is flashing before her eyes? 


Oh shit, my son spurted, our brains finally connecting on the same vibration. His panicked eyes glanced over at me and I felt my rightful position of power taking hold once again. 


Put the car in park, I directed, authority dripping. We’ll just sit here and wait for them to stop driving. We sat in silence  and watched as the enemy vehicle circled before finally slipping into a parking spot and two teenage girls emerged, giggling and smiling and acting like they’ve almost never hit a parking lot pillar of any kind and I stared, amazed. They can’t even be a year older than my son and yet here they are, just driving around by themselves, not a care in the world, no parent to be found. Is that my future? 


I distinctly remember the first time I drove alone as a teenager. I was heading to work, ten minutes away, my mom’s Grand Marquis my vessel. She stood in the driveway, doing her best impression of not looking concerned, and it wasn’t until I pulled the door shut and saw her standing there in front of me, not here beside me, that I got a little nervous. Nobody was there to guide me, protect me, nudge me. It was just…me. I gave her my best impression of not looking concerned and a shaky little wave and off I went. Only now can I even imagine the lump residing in her throat as she watched me back out of the long driveway, disappear around the corner and wait for the phone call from my workplace signaling a safe journey.  


Parenting is terrifying. They should really make that more clear. 


After a few more minutes of arguing about which way to turn the steering wheel and a quick silent prayer to Our Father, who art in heaven, we decided to be done for the day. I found myself back in the driver’s seat and never had I ever been more aware of setting a good example in my entire life. I miraculously morphed into the most law abiding, cautious, patient driver the universe had ever known, not once having ever suggested that someone might be a fucking idiot and should get the hell out of my way as I speed up to be that last car hitting the left turn arrow from Manhattan Beach Blvd onto Sepulveda. TARGET WAITS FOR NO ONE PEOPLE. I made a quick mental note to stop broadcasting personal opinions of complete strangers while driving and also maybe ixnay of the uckfay. 


We pulled up to a stoplight; my son engrossed in sports on his phone, me engrossed with resisting all urges to pick up my phone at this 7 minute red light, reminding myself that I am now the world’s safest driver. As cars fly by, I shake my head at how unnecessarily fast they’re going. Teenagers whizz by on overpopulated e-bikes, their exposed skulls beckoning me to yell out my window WHERE ARE YOUR HELMETS, YOUNG PEOPLE?  And pedestrians! Just crossing the street, whenever they feel like it, heads down, eyes on Instagram, not at all concerned with oncoming traffic. Driving is not safe. 


You should never drive, son,  I decide. Yeah. I like that. That…feels safer. No driving. Ever.


Huh? he glanced up from his phone. 


Nothing, I say.


We sit some more, the whoosh of the cars hypnotizing as my over active imagination grips my conscience and my heart begins to pound between my ears as each and every horrible thing that could happen to my son while driving flashes before my eyes. What if someone hits him? What if he hits someone else? What if he is hurt? What if he is broken? Alone? Scared? What if he is gone? Where was I? Why wasn’t I there? Why wasn’t it me? I am the protector. I am the guardian. I keep you safe. What if I can’t keep you safe? What if? What if?


The light flickers green and I blink my eyes back to reality, my foot mechanically moving from one pedal to the other.  So silly, I chastise myself and shake away the imagined nightmares. So silly. He’s right here with you. He’s right next to me. He’ll be safe. He’ll be fine. He’ll be fine. 


It’s what I have to believe because I know he has to drive. I know he has to leave me and live his life outside of me. That’s all part of this terrifying job of parenting. Give them wings and all that shit. You sprouted this, mama. Now you gotta let em go. Even when it’s hard. Especially when it’s so hard. I want you to watch you fly, kid. I just…didn’t think it would happen so fast. 


A few days after this first driving lesson together, I picked my son up from football practice. He hopped in my jeep and he’s chatty. He always chatty after practice. I smiled as I listened to him, relishing in his animated warmth that can disappear at any second. I think of that mom in Target with her tantrum throwing toddler. Wasn’t that just me? I think of her and I just want to tell her what every parent does want to hear: you have so much to look forward to. 


I pull over to the curb. 


What are you doing, he asks?

You wanna drive home?

Okay, he says.


We swap spots. We buckle up. He looks over at me and smiles. He is safe with me now. He is here with me now. He is next to me now. 


Ready, bruh?


Ready, bruh.