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Nov. 21st, 2012 11:36 pm
altarflame: (Default)
Ananda was my firstborn, and for awhile it was just the two of us in day to day life. She made me a mother, turned my whole life upside down, and she is more like me than any of my other kids. I spend the most money on her, BY FAR, on a regular basis - be it in driving her to social events and getting her ridiculous shirts from Hot Topic, humoring her penchant for gourmet cheese and coffee, or finding a way to get her own cello and wanting her to have a good phone for texting. Her birthday and Christmas present amounts regularly triple the dollar amounts of the other kids, though the gift quantity is often similar. I recognize that her love language is "quality time," and try to make sure I give it to her. I also make a lot of "oldest" exceptions for her (although they're balanced with "oldest" responsibilities), like staying up latest watching a movie just she and I. She's always been complex, and obviously had an intense internal life, and I've always went out of my way to respect that, through everything from therapy to privacy to copious unending research on and support for her various issues (ongoing - dyslexia; recovered - selective mutism; once upon a time - impending menstruation). People around us like to give her a lot of sympathy for having a lot of younger siblings, as though it's a hardship. People online say she's beautiful, which is true but also the least of her. All of the other kids think that she is my favorite.

I get along with Aaron best out of all of them, when it's just the two of us - our personalities are very compatible, and it's "easy," to hang out with him. When we are a family, though, he is BY FAR the most frustrating, and I lose my temper on him with a frequency and vengeance none of the others experience. I continue to harbor some soul-crushing guilt, for things that happened with him and other people, early in his life. Aaron has the most challenges in everyday living, and the most "interesting" and showy talents, as well. He's also the most drop dead gorgeous, and the most full of himself. I have to search for ways to try to be positive with him to balance the lectures and scolding on a regular basis, as well as to encourage him in his strengths - especially since he is the most sensitive and intuitive, and really is just gutted by criticism and anger. I tend to bend heaven and earth if there's something he's fixated on that I think will really benefit him - and then he ends up in New York City, riding his unicycle, or with a cockatoo and a drum set in his bedroom. Relatives rarely know what to make of Aaron. Most people on the internet misinterpret SPD symptoms as meaning he's a jerk - and/or assume I'm exaggerating his positive traits. They also think it's obvious he's my favorite.

I have always put in the most effort and time, with Isaac. From his impossible high needs infancy and into his difficult, destructive, and miserable toddlerhood, moving along through his troubled early childhood to his learning disabilities and stomach problems - it is always Isaac. Whether everyone else is parked in front of the tv as I pace with him, left at home with a sitter while I take him to an appointment, or waiting in a line to talk to me while I sit and help him with homework, it does not end. Pacing outside the OR for appendicitis, waiting for the sling for his humerus, having it out with Grant Sr that he can wear glittery shirts if he wants to and panicking because his croup moves up to 911 levels anytime he gets a little stressed...oh, my Isaac. I've also always taken the most pictures of him, and had the most pictures of him printed, because I am so enchanted with his vibrant and unique looks within our brood. Strangers gravitate toward Isaac and LJ readers pick him as the one to root for, as well as getting disgusted that I obviously don't like him. His counselors, teachers and doctors/specialists all tell me I need to be careful because I cannot always favor Isaac as I do and have been, since it isn't fair to the rest of the family.

Jake and I had a special bond from day 1. Laura talked jealously about how the two of us always seem to be "skipping through a field of daisies together." I have a very difficult time telling him no, about damn near anything, or enforcing negative consequences with him. He is the only baby I bonded closely with right at and after birth, and he was my easiest baby, too. He did everything the earliest, and has always been the biggest for his age. He was the first who looked anything like me, in my own eyes. I find endless pride in his glowing good health, huge appetite for healthy foods, crazy awesome afro hair, and amicable, independent nature. I video tape anything he asks me to, and just ask him for hugs throughout the day. He was the first to nurse until he was 4 years old, and the one I quote most often. One of the moles on my arm is "his mole," and he still messes with it as a comfort object sometimes, and we have a lot of oft-repeated phrases for us, like "we have a lot of love." Other people tend to not notice Jake much beyond his hair, and people online rarely mention much else about him, either. People in my real life who are close to us - like Laura, and Grant - always feel he is my favorite.

Elise and I went through absolute hell together. I worried about her as I have never worried about anything else in my entire life. I have gray hairs and probably ulcers, because of her, and I continue to analyze her growth, behavior, comprehension, speech, creativity, temperament and so forth far beyond what I ever have any of the others. There has also been soaring joy, rushes of relief, and still on a daily basis disbelief at how adorable her ATTITUDE is. I also feel like the two of us emerged from 2007 together as survivors, battered and scarred but doing alright. There are always people online and in PATH who approach me just to find out how Elise is doing :) It's her I constantly text pictures of to all the grand and great grandparents, and post pictures of on facebook, and it could be because of that - along with her being the youngest, and my girly girl, and "the miracle baby" - that all of our distant relatives are sure she's definitely my favorite (and theirs).
altarflame: (Default)
That soup was awesome! I've been eating it here and there for the last couple of days. To everyone who pointed it out or thought it, no, chicken broth is not vegan :p Use vegan broth and it'll be vegan, honestly people you know what I mean ;)




I've been thinking a lot lately about how mom's identify, or don't identify, or feel obligated to identify, primarily as moms. This is another area - like politics and religion and many other things - where I sort of fall through the cracks between most peoples' comfort zones, into a sort of no man's land all my own where nobody really agrees with me. I think? Maybe lots of you agree with me! Perhaps we'll see.

Because I think it's important to at least try to do what is ideal and not just ok for my kids whenever possible, I typically end up hanging out (online and IRL) with a lot of extremely dedicated mothers - attachment parents and homeschoolers, primarily: people who have made parenting a huge dominant part of their life. Most people would say I've made parenting a huge dominant part of my life, some just because I've got five kids. And it is big!

But I really can't imagine feeling like a mom is who I am. It's one of the things that I am, obviously, and it's a large part of what I do, but I know so many people who go around online as "SoAndSo'sMom" or "Mommyofxnumber" and I feel like I could never do that. I drive a minivan because it's practical and that doesn't bother me one bit, I thought people in booju years ago who said they would never put an Honor Roll type bumper sticker on their car were really immature because that's just to show your kids you're proud, it isn't about ruining your stupid IMAGE - but to self-identify as a parent, as your NAME, in contexts that often have nothing to do with the kids...is not something I would naturally do, personally. To me that sort of thing is stepping outside of benefiting the kids and into a vacuum where your own life is over since you attend to other peoples', now.

There are so many women whose facebook bios and blog "about me"s JUST say that they're a parent to whatever kids, with and without agenda (I'm a breastfeeding mama, I'm a natural parent). Some of that is the search for solidarity in a society that doesn't exactly validate those agendas, I get that - but I was disappointed early on by how infrequently things worked out when I sought out relationships with other "crunchy parents" primarily based on them also being crunchy parents. The moms I've stayed friends with are women I love for themselves, who incidentally happen to have or not have kids.

I'm not judging anyone, at least most of the time, but I do feel isolated at times within parenting circles. My friend Karen - who I love! - is really put out that 3 of her 4 (normally homeschooled) kids are gone for most of the day all summer at various activities, and makes a lot of half-serious jokes about crying into her tea alone about it. I hear her out, but I'm so happy for my kids having great things to do and am SO RELIEVED to not have it ALL on me for awhile. I'm "good at them," I didn't even really anticipate that relief - but it's there now, in a big way. It FEELS like summer vacation for me, too, even though I'm actually doing as much or more than usual. Pressure is off.

I do not relate to the terror that kids will one day move out, at all. I'm having a great time with my kids, but I think in my mind part of that might be contingent on how fleeting it all is. Things would feel very differently if they were eternal and kids were not growing and changing.

If I wanted a stranger to know things about me, I'd probably say, "I'm a writer, and a mother to a lot of kids, and a student" or something like that. Because I lived for 17 years before any of this motherhood business started, and I'll only be 43 when Elise is a legal adult. I have a lot of plans for those post-kid decades, and I'm not talking about grandchildren (though that is a really cool concept should it happen).

Anyway, yeah, first world problems for me and all that, but people really tend to either be at one end of this spectrum (making me almost uncomfortable with how UN-engaged they are as parents, talking about how burdened they are by very small kids right in earshot of the kids, doing the bare ass minimum at all times to keep a baby alive) or the other (sad and lonely when kids go on a sleepover, acting like every milestone is a tragedy).

Perhaps because I'm really, sincerely thrilled with how each of my individual kids is turning out, and just so damned proud of every one of them for where they're at right now, in such a giddy and amazed way - I do not think they grow up too fast*.




Isaac, Jake, Elise and I have been doing a lot of fun outings and having adventures while A&A are at camp. That will switch to adventures with A&A, when the littles are at their camp. I'll probably do a big update and pic post about this soon :)

For now, I've been up early on a rainy Saturday morning studying for a Statistics exam I'm about to go take for quite awhile, and I ain't even mad.



*I have felt like they grow up too fast as a postpartum mom with rapidly changing babies. And I have cried over old baby clothes several times in my life. Clearly I'm in a different phase of life now, so if you have infants just disregard this entry completely.

OK!

Jan. 3rd, 2012 01:12 pm
altarflame: (Default)
Took Grant to the train station an hour away.
Got Elise ready for, to and from preschool.
Acquired new semester parking decal, schoolbooks for classes that start tomorrow and information on scholarships I may be eligible for.
Paid electric bill.
Paid other bills.
Taking Bob and his girlfriend back to JobCorps with all her stuff (they stayed in Lakeland with my mother for the break) and cooking lunch now, before packing a food bag and taking kids to TLC....

I read this article as I stood in line awhile ago and it struck me as very profound (this is about rape and how girls are taught to be victimized)- http://www.utne.com/2005-01-01/betrayed-by-the-angel.aspx

My sister and I have talked together about the "freeze and panic internally" response we had to being molested, how it sucks, how we want our daughters to be able to stand up and say "Get your filthy hands off me, asshole!" This came up very recently for me with Annie (a minor situation where she was being made uncomfortable like the pencil jabbing in the story, and I was a fool and failed and chose to keep the peace as she got upset and kept still). We talked about it. I apologized. I argued with her when she said it was no big deal.

But yeah, Virginia Woolf is quoted in that article as saying "A phantom is far harder to kill than a reality". Yes.

Yes. I can't count the times I've mentally murdered Jud's ghost - he doesn't live in my head anymore, but he still comes around.

So that is germinating in my brain right now. Feel free to share, though I'm somewhat slow responding to comments at the moment.
altarflame: (bleeding roses)
I see the media-fueled stigma against teenage mothers growing every day, and sometimes it's irritating. Because there are pregnant teenagers out there right now, and teen moms out there right now, who are NOTHING LIKE THAT and it would be nice for them to have something - anything - beyond Bristol Palin for a freaking role model. Bristol Palin still talks a lot of crap about how terrible it is to be a teen mom, which I can't help but think is going to be...interesting? for her son to process one day.

Yes, most teenage relationships will not last, which is hard when you have kids involved.
Not that "most" adult relationships last, these days...

Yes, most teen parents have a hard time making ends meet, and that is a big hurdle.
Not that older people have guarantees in this economy...

I'm just saying, as someone who got pregnant by accident at 17 (AND 18!) years old and feels like I love my family and am doing a pretty damned good job, that there could be a little more reality at work in these reality tv portrayals.

Because I've seen plenty of ignorant, partying 30 year olds embroiled in baby-daddy drama and leaning on the grandparents for help. It's gross, it's sad, and it happens at every age. It does not have to be you, just because you happen to be 16 (or 17, or 18).

There ARE perks and positives to being a young mom! If you are reading this as a teen mother, or soon to be mother:

-You are the most fertile you will ever be, and the least likely to give birth to a child with birth defects - this is huge shit that people just completely ignore in their frenzy to make sure all young women delay childbirth as long as possible (like, often until it's REALLY REALLY hard to get pregnant :/).

-You have a lot of energy and stamina for staying up with babies and chasing after toddlers that makes the early years a lot easier in some respects.

-You have significantly decreased your risk of breast cancer just by carrying a pregnancy to term before you turn 20. Delaying or altogether avoiding childbirth is one of the biggest factors that increases breast cancer risk, but this is not something anyone wants you to be aware of when they're talking "awareness", since being a teen mom=being a pariah. Breastfeeding is also hugely beneficial to both you AND your infant daughter's breast cancer risks, incidentally.

-Your children will (most likely, barring tragedy) have much more time with you alive and in their life, as well as with grandparents, aunts and uncles, and great-grands. It has been one of the best and richest parts of my life, to have had all of my grandparents involved in my life throughout childhood and adolescence, and my kids have so much to be thankful for in this regard. All of their grandparents are not just alive, they're 40 and 50 somethings who take them out on the boat and wave runner, cook them big meals, and know how to get on the internet to comment on their facebook pictures.

-YOU will have the ability to interact with any grandchildren as an able bodied and with-it person, and you will also have a lot of adult life to look forward to once your kids are grown and out of the house. I always hear people talk about how good it is to get your partying in and your craziness out before you settle down and have babies - but I really don't think there is ANY amount of traveling or finding myself that would make it ok for me to know that all I had to look forward to once the kids were grown, was retirement. Those days when motherhood is not just heavy but impossibly burdensome, I feel like I'd have a much harder time coping if I was, say, in my 40s or 50s instead of 29. It helps me tremendously to know that there is a whole world of whatever I want to make it, for me, beyond raising kids.

I also have seen and talked with some other moms about how the adjustment to parenthood seems to be far easier for people who are going from being under their parents authority to living on their own with a kid (wow I have so much more freedom now!!) than for people who go from autonomous adult living to living on their own with a kid (Oh dear lord where did my freedom go???) Really, years spent backpacking across Europe and going to the spa (or clubbing and tanning) sometimes make it HARDER, not easier, to get used to sleepless nights and packing a bag to leave the house for even 20 minutes. I never experienced that kind of angst at all, since my time with a newborn was also my first taste of a lack of curfew or chores. A baby is not that big of an obstacle in the way of your sex life compared to your guardians determined to keep you from ending up with a baby. Your mileage may vary, but I have had multiple older and more "secure" and set up moms say it was very, very hard for them to give up a sort of independence I never knew I was missing. Both of my co-parenting relationships also felt wildly free and easy living on our own with a baby vs living with our parents trying to get permission to be together sometimes.


There will be hardship, not least the horrific taboo of being young with a kid in tow following you around, and you will struggle more with finances than someone with a mortgage and a minivan (although I have to say, now that I have a mortgage and a minivan, that it is still a struggle and will always be a struggle unless you're rich). But there are trade-offs, here, and while I wouldn't necessarily tell people to plan to get pregnant as teens...I would actually ask them to stop and think a whole hell of a lot...I would also say that to shame and ridicule and lecture those who ALREADY HAVE is pretty fucking pointless. It's kind of like the people who want there to be less abortion, so they go laying thick layers of guilt on people for the abortions they've already had, like THAT is gonna help anybody?

Wouldn't it make a lot more sense for the children out there being born to teenagers, to empower "teen parents" and tell them they can just be "parents" or even (I'm gonna say it) GOOD PARENTS? The messages we're sending these moms and dads now are about as far from "you can do this" as they could be. The only time I ever see a positive spin on a teen pregnancy, is when it ends in the baby being adopted out, and that is FUCKING SAD AND RIDICULOUS. It can be responsible to place your child with a loving couple. It is also responsible, and loving, to raise your child yourself. You will have things to offer that the older couple cannot, just like the older couple has things you don't. I never even considered giving Ananda to anyone else - the idea inspires a protective panic response because she's my daughter.

Nevermind that throughout most of history, and still in many parts of the world, ALL teenagers were getting married and having babies, as the biological norm would still have it for everyone.

I mean, the bottom line is, you are the horniest and most impulsive you are EVER going to be, as a teenager. Plus hormones, minus impulse control - there will always be teenage mothers, regardless of how good the education is or how widely available the birth control. Some of them do a really shitty job of parenting and never manage to do anything with their lives after the babies are born.


Some of us do a pretty amazing job and wouldn't change a thing.

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